Although President-elect Donald Trump wanted to start 2025 without having to worry about the debt ceiling, he did not get his wish.
Addressing the debt ceiling, which will be reinstated on January 2, is still on the list of congressional Republicans’ New Year’s resolutions. The House last week fell far short of passing a two-year extension of the suspension of the limit as part of a GOP-led government spending bill. Congress ultimately passed a package to fund the federal government into mid-March that did not include Trump’s demand to deal with the debt ceiling.
Although the debt ceiling returns on January 2, the nation’s outstanding debt is set to decline slightly on that day so the new limit will be reached again later in the month, according to a letter Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen sent to congressional leaders on Friday afternoon.
Trump had hoped to address the debt ceiling now in part so it wouldn’t affect the ambitious agenda he wants to get through Congress next year. Also, he wanted it raised on “Biden’s watch,” so President Joe Biden would take any heat for the increase, a move that has proven unpopular with fiscal conservatives in Trump’s party.
“If Democrats won’t cooperate on the debt ceiling now, what makes anyone think they would do it in June during our administration?,” he said in a joint statement with Vice President-elect JD Vance last week.
Here’s what you need to know about the return of the debt ceiling: