Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
No Debt Breakthrough; Biden Says Covid Fund Clawbacks 'On The Table'
President Joe Biden and congressional leaders confronted each other on the debt limit impasse Tuesday, ending their meeting with no breakthrough but agreeing to meet again this week to try to avert the looming risk of an unprecedented government default. Speaking at the White House, Biden described the talks as 鈥減roductive鈥 even though House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said after the high-stakes Oval Office meeting that he 鈥渄idn鈥檛 see any new movement鈥 toward resolving the stalemate. (Miller, Min Kin, Boak and Mascaro, 5/10)
Nearly two hours after the end of what appeared to be a fruitless meeting between President Biden and Republican leaders this week over raising the federal debt limit, Mr. Biden finally offered a hint as to how the government might avoid a catastrophic default. Actually, it was two hints, contained in an impromptu news conference in the Roosevelt Room. (Tankersley, 5/10)
President Biden on Tuesday said rescinding unspent COVID-19 relief funds is 鈥渙n the table鈥 when it comes to an area where he and lawmakers can agree to make some聽spending cuts聽鈥 but he was vague on whether that could also be part of debt ceiling talks. When asked if he would consider clawing back the unspent funds 鈥渆ven if it鈥檚 independent on these debt limit discussions,鈥 Biden appeared to leave that option open. (Gangitano, 5/9)
The Treasury department makes millions of payments per day, all of which would be in jeopardy if the government runs out of money. 鈥淭he most direct effect is that some people who are owed money from the federal government may not get paid,鈥 Shai Akabas, director of economic policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center, told USA TODAY. Those payments include Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, federal salaries, food stamps and more. (Tran, 5/10)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: Republicans Vow Not To Cut Veterans鈥 Benefits. But The Legislation Suggests Otherwise
House Republicans have set themselves a tough, if not impossible, task in attempting to use a standoff over the nation鈥檚 debt limit to cut federal spending to what it was in 2022. Retrenching to those budget levels would require cutting 8% or 9% from the discretionary program side of the ledger, which excludes entitlement programs such as Social Security and Medicare. Spending on those programs is required by law. Other spending is dictated by congressional appropriations annually. The latter is up for debate here. (McAuliff, 5/9)
In news about PEPFAR 鈥
Now entering its 21st year, the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, the largest commitment by a country to eliminate a disease, is considered a government success story, credited with major advancements in combating HIV/AIDS聽globally. But this year, eight provisions of the law also known as PEPFAR are up for reauthorization, making it聽a聽key health measure up for congressional consideration. (Raman, 5/9)