Yellen urges Congress to raise debt ceiling, suggests Democrats may need to go it alone
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Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Monday renewed her push for Congress to raise the debt ceiling before the U.S. government runs out of cash in early December, but she said Democrats should be willing to address the issue on their own if Republicans refuse to act in a bipartisan manner to avoid a first-ever debt default.
"There are a number of ways in which the debt ceiling can be raised," Yellen told reporters during a news conference in Dublin following Group of 20 meetings in Rome. "I strongly believe that it is bipartisan responsibility to do this. There is a way for Democrats to do it entirely on their own."
Congress approved a short-term debt limit increase in early October, raising the borrowing limit by $480 billion after a lengthy partisan battle. But the agreement did nothing to resolve the broader disagreement between Democrats and Republicans over the debt, teeing up another showdown for the end of the year.
CONGRESS FACES FLURRY OF ECONOMIC DEADLINES BEFORE THE YEAR ENDS
Lawmakers have until Dec. 3, when the treasury will exhaust the extraordinary measures it's using to temporarily finance the government, to raise or suspend the debt ceiling. The current debt limit is around $28.4 trillion.
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