U.S.
Senate
Majority
Leader
Chuck
Schumer
(D-NY)
holds a
press
conference
after
Congress
approves
a
debt-limit
suspension,
averting
what
would
have
been a
first-ever
default,
on
Capitol
Hill in
Washington,
U.S.,
June 1,
2023.
REUTERS/Evelyn
Hockstein |
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Senate
passes
debt
ceiling
deal.
Here's
who
voted
for and
against.
By
Kati
Perry,
Adrián
Blanco,
Hannah
Dormido,
and
Nikolas
Mourtoupalas
washingtonpost.com
WASHINGTON
- The
Senate
voted
Thursday
night to
raise
the
limit of
how much
money
the
federal
government
can
borrow
to pay
its
bills.
The
measure,
which
passed
in a
63-36
vote
after
receiving
bipartisan
support
from the
House
Wednesday,
will be
sent to
President
Biden to
sign
into
law.
Debt
ceiling
vote
results
Both
Senate
Majority
Leader
Charles
E.
Schumer
(D-N.Y.)
and
Senate
Minority
Leader
Mitch
McConnell
(R-Ky.)
urged
senators
to pass
the
bill.
“Time is
a luxury
the
Senate
does not
have if
we want
to
prevent
default,”
Schumer
said
during
floor
remarks.
Biden
must
sign the
legislation
before
Monday —
the day
the
government
would
default
on its
debt
without
an
extended
borrowing
cap.
While
several
senators
pressed
for
amendment
votes
Thursday
night,
none
sought
to
derail
the
legislation.
“This
budget
agreement
is a
bipartisan
compromise.
Neither
side got
everything
it
wanted,”
Biden
said
after
the
House
approved
the
bill. “I
have
been
clear
that the
only
path
forward
is a
bipartisan
compromise
that can
earn the
support
of both
parties.
This
agreement
meets
that
test.”
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