McCarthy makes plea for Republicans to back debt ceiling plan

Originally Published: 18 APR 23 10:09 ET

By Melanie Zanona and Haley Tablot, CNN

(CNN) -- Speaker Kevin McCarthy made a plea to House Republicans during a closed-door meeting Tuesday morning to back his debt ceiling plan, telling them that although it doesn't have to include everything they want, it will help get him to the negotiating table.

McCarthy also told members that once he is at the table, he can push for other policy provisions down the road, according to multiple sources in the room, underscoring the idea that leadership sees the GOP-only plan as purely a way to strengthen their hand at the negotiating table.

House Republicans are insisting that any increase in the debt limit must be paired with spending cuts, while the White House argues that the limit should be raised without any conditions. McCarthy wants to move a debt limit bill through the House as a way to put pressure on the White House to come to the table for negotiation, even if the bill won't pass the Democratic-controlled Senate. The challenge now for McCarthy is whether he can unite his conference behind a plan amid internal divisions between different factions.

The closed-door meeting kicks off a difficult push by GOP leaders to wrangle 218 votes for a proposal to raise the debt ceiling and reduce federal spending. McCarthy walked members through his proposal, which includes clawing back unspent Covid-19 funds, 10-year caps on spending, prohibiting President Joe Biden's student loan forgiveness and enacting a GOP energy bill.

House Rules Chairman Tom Cole told CNN that the GOP debt limit bill will on the House floor next week.

Conservatives are pushing for more to be included while some have said they won't back a debt ceiling hike under any circumstances, illustrating how challenging it is going to be for GOP leaders to unite the conference behind a proposal.