Deutsche Welle, 12 February 2014
The US
Senate has approved a measure to raise the country's debt ceiling for one more
year. The "no strings attached" bill now awaits President Barack
Obama's signature.
The upper
house of the US Congress voted 55-43 on Wednesday in favor of a bill which will
allow the US to continue borrowing normally for the next 13 months, also known
as "raising the debt ceiling." The House of Representatives - thelower house - passed the measure the previous day by a narrow 221-201.
"What
needed to get done got done," Republican Senator Bob Corker said after the
vote on Wednesday.
"At
the end of the day there was no stated outcome by any way other than a clean
debt ceiling," Corker added.
The final
outcome in the Senate followed a tense procedural vote, which would have
derailed the measure had it not been for 12 Republicans who joined the
Democrats to push the bill over the initial hurdle 67-31.
Once President Obama signs the bill into law, the US Treasury will be able to pay
its current debts, estimated at more than $17 trillion (12.5 trillion euros)
until March 15, 2015. Without Congressional approval, the US would have
exhausted its borrowing capacity by the end of the month, stopping it from
paying, among other things, federal workers' salaries and pensions.
Unlike
previous attempts to raise the debt ceiling, this week's measure lacked the
additional items aimed at forcing the Obama administration to make political
concessions and was, therefore, seen as a victory.
In October,
Republican lawmakers attempted to block funding for the president's
controversial overhaul of the American health care system by refusing to agree
to raise the debt ceiling. The political manoeuvre resulted in a 16-day government shutdown - the country's first in nearly two decades - and led to a
sharp drop in Republican-support among Americans.
This week's
bill now pushes the issue of US debt down the road, well past mid-term
elections in November.
kms/ch (AFP, Reuters)

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