Negotiators Chase Debt Agreement,
As Senate Defeats Democratic Plan
URGENT: Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) says furious negotiations are happening behind the scenes among top Democratic leadership after the Senate voted down a Democratic debt plan 50-49.
Obama Tweets as America Burns...Sound familiar?
House Republican to Obama: Stop TweetingThings That Make You Go Hmmm - Such As Keeping It Real
Grant Williams summarizes: "So, keeping it real, what happens now? Well, the debt ceiling will get raised - most likely this weekend - and the usual photo-op of sycophants cheering and applauding behind a podium will be all over the news, but the raise will be just another step on the road to financial ruin for the United States if it continues to layer fresh debt upon existing debt as a way to solve its problems and turns to printing presses and raised ceilings as the balm of choice. In this kick-the-can culture we now live in since the events of 2008, it’s never that difficult to figure out WHAT the powers-that-be will do (simple: whatever short-term fix involves the least short-term pain to banks and to their own chances of reelection), but it seems to be getting harder to ascertain WHEN they will do it. This is all well and good, except sooner or later they will wake up and find that the adults have decided enough is enough and they’ll vote with their money...So tell me - and keep it real - would YOU lend money to a country with THOSE debt dynamics that is being run by a bunch of incompetent, bickering grandstanders if it DIDN’T possess the world’s reserve currency? Me either."Jim Sinclair’s Commentary
The latest pseudo solution compromise on us debt from Washington.
US debt crisis: deal close to avoid default
Senate due to vote at 1800 BST on compromise thrashed out over weekend before plan passes to House of Representatives
Ewen MacAskill in Washington and agencies
guardian.co.uk, Sunday 31 July 2011 10.33 BST
Negotiations to raise the US debt ceiling and avert the country’s first ever default continued through the night on Saturday as Republicans and Democrats tried to reach a deal before markets open on Monday. Photograph: Alex Wong/Getty Images
Congress and the White House were closing in on a deal on Sunday to head off huge market falls and the prospect of America defaulting on Tuesday for the first time in its history.
The Senate is scheduled to vote around 1pm (1800 BST) on a compromise thrashed out over the weekend between the Democratic leader in the Senate, Harry Reid, and his Republican counterpart, Mitch McConnell.
McConnell, interviewed on CNN on Sunday, said: "We are very close. We had a good day yesterday. Both the president and vice-president called me … and they understand we have to come together."
The deal would then have to go to the House of Representatives, which could be more problematic given the Republican majority.
There are enough mainstream Republicans, when combined with Democrats, to pass the bill and that is likely to happen. But the Republican House speaker, John Boehner, will be uneasy about alienating the large core of hardline conservatives, mainly Tea Party sympathisers, who will probably vote against it, and may seek last-minute concessions to try to pacify them.
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Jim Sinclair’s Commentary
More of the theatrics in Washington on the debt issue.
Senate Blocks Reid’s Debt Ceiling Bill
By JENNIFER STEINHAUER and CARL HULSE
Published: July 31, 2011
WASHINGTON — Last-ditch budget talks between top Congressional Republicans and President Obama continued on Sunday, as the top Senate Republican and Democrat both expressed optimism that a $3 trillion deal could be reached to avert the economic and political calamity of a potential federal default.
But without a compromise in hand, the divided Senate could not break a filibuster and went wearily into recess while the leaders resumed their search for something that could pass.
Senator Harry Reid, the majority leader, had convened the Senate at noon, then moved to a procedural vote on his own proposal for raising the debt ceiling. Senate Republicans had been filibustering that plan, which House Republicans rejected on Saturday, and the vote on breaking the filibuster fell 10 votes short of the 60 votes needed under Senate rules. Even so, Mr. Reid said before the cloture vote that he was “cautiously optimistic” that an agreement could be reached today that would make it possible for the Senate to amend his bill and gain bipartisan approval in both chambers.
But Mr. Reid said that “there are a number of issues that must be resolved.”
“Our optimism in days past has been really stomped on,” he said.
Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, said Sunday that he was “very close” to recommending to his members that they sign on to a debt deal with President Obama and the Democrats.
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