Quote from AK Forty Seven:
Of course he wont.After already agreeing to cuts with no new revenue he'll cave to republicans again
http://www.aim.org/newswire/white-house-rules-out-constitution-debt-option/
White House rules out Constitution debt option
WASHINGTON (Reuters) â President Barack Obama will not use a clause in the Constitution to bypass Congress and raise the federal governmentâs debt limit on his own, the White House said Tuesday.
âItâs not available,â White House press secretary Jay Carney said in the administrationâs firmest dismissal of the 14th Amendment as a way to avoid a default if Congress fails to lift the $14.3 trillion debt limit by an August 2 deadline.
âThe Constitution makes clear that Congress has the authority, not the president, to borrow money and only Congress can increase the statutory debt ceiling. That is just a reality.â
The 14th Amendment stipulates the U.S. public debt âshall not be questionedâ â which some legal scholars argue would allow Obama, a Democrat, to sidestep lawmakers and raise the borrowing limit on his own.
The White House has persistently poured cold water on the idea that a provision in the Constitution stemming from the Civil War in the 1860s to make sure Union debts were honored and Confederate obligations were not could be a way around the debt impasse.
But some influential Democrats have continued to see it as a legitimate strategy to sidestep a Congress deadlocked over the debt limit because of fiscally conservative Tea Party Republicans who will not compromise on any tax increases.
Former President Bill Clinton, a Democrat, has said that if it came to averting a U.S. default, he would invoke the 14th Amendment, raise the debt ceiling and âforce the courts to stop me.â
Obama played down this notion Friday, when he said White House lawyers were ânot persuaded that that is a winning argument.â But his remarks did signal the 14th Amendment route was at least being reviewed by his administration.
That impression remained intact after comments by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner Sunday that bypassing Congress was ânot a workable option,â which also appeared to stop short of a flat-out rejection.
Tuesday, Carney went out of his way to rule it out.
âYou can have an esoteric discussion about constitutional law and what could not or should not be,â he said. âBut we donât have the luxury or the time. The law is as it is. That is how we view it and that is why we have to reach a compromise.â