This page shows textual changes in the document between the two versions indicated in the dates above. Textual matter removed in the later version is indicated with red strikethrough and textual matter added in the later version is indicated with blue.
Almost all borrowing by the federal government is conducted by the Treasury Department, within the restrictions established by a single, statutory limit (ceiling) on the total amount of debt that may be outstanding at any time. By law, the Treasury cannot exceed federal debt limits, so the Treasury periodically has had to ask Congress to enact new debt limits so it can fulfill its financial commitments. Since 1978, 5859 measures adjusting or suspending the statutory debt limit either as stand-alone legislation or as part of legislation dealing with other matters have been enacted into law.
This report provides roll call vote data identified by the Congressional Research Service for measures to adjust the statutory debt limit. This report will be updated as events warrant.
Almost all borrowing by the federal government is conducted by the Treasury Department, within the restrictions established by a single, statutory limit (ceiling) on the total amount of debt that may be outstanding at any time. By law, the Treasury cannot exceed federal debt limits, so the Treasury periodically has had to ask Congress to enact new debt limits so it can fulfill its financial commitments. Since 1978, 5859 measures adjusting or suspending the statutory debt limit either as stand-alone legislation or as part of legislation dealing with other matters have been enacted into law.1
During the 115th Congress, on March 15, 2017, a previously enacted debt limit suspension period expired. On March 16, 2017, the Treasury Department reset the debt limit at $19,809 billion, and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin notified Congress that the Treasury Department would use extraordinary measures to temporarily prevent the United States from defaulting on its obligations. These measures were in use until September 8, 2017, when President Trump signed P.L. 115-56, a measure that included a debt limit suspension through December 8, 2017, and reset the debt limit at $20,456 billion.
On December 8, 2017, the Treasury Department again implemented extraordinary measures, which estimates suggested would prevent the United States from defaulting on its obligations until early March of 2018. On February 9, 2018, a continuing appropriations measure, P.L. 115-123, was enacted that included the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018, and, in §30301, a suspension of the federal debt through March 1, 2019.2
This report provides tallies of votes on final passage for each enacted measure that adjusted or suspended the statutory debt limit from 1978 to present. Note that because the process for congressional consideration of bills can be complex, attempting to interpret the intent of votes prior to the final vote on passage of a measure may yield various, and sometimes conflicting, interpretations. For the sake of clarity, this report only provides vote information on the final passage of each measure.3
In addition to information on debt limit legislation and votes on final passage in the House and Senate, other data elements identified in the tables below include bill numbers; roll call votes, voice votes, or passage by unanimous consent; dates of final passage and vote tally information; dates of enactment and public law numbers for the enacted laws; and brief background information on whether the measures were considered as stand-alone measures (i.e., dealing entirely with just a change to the federal debt limit and not including provisions on other matters).
Table 1 provides information on all enacted measures to adjust or suspend the federal debt limit from 1978 to 20182019, including data on the specific changes to the federal debt limit set at the time of enactment. The bill number and public law columns of the table provide links to Congress.gov bill summary and status information for each measure. Roll call votes on final enactment can be extracted through the actions tab for each measure within Congress.gov back to 1993.4 Table 1 also contains cross-references to the notes columns in Table 2 and Table 3. The notes columns in those tables provide additional details on how each measure was considered.
Table 2 identifies stand-alone measures from the period. Table 3 identifies bills considered as other than stand-alone measures5 and provides brief background information on the nature of each measure and by what means the measures were considered.
Year |
Bill Number |
Final House & Senate Vote Tally & Date of Votes |
Public Law Number & Date of Enactment |
Debt Limit Amount |
Temporary Provisions Expiration Date |
|
House |
Senate |
|||||
1978 |
233-172 3/21/1978 |
Voice Vote 3/22/1978 |
P.L. 95-252 3/27/1978 |
$752.0 |
8/01/1978 |
|
205-202 7/19/1978 |
62-31 8/02/1978 |
P.L. 95- |
$798 |
3/31/1979 |
||
1979 |
209-165 (H.Res. 183, 4/2/1979) (See notes column in Table 3) |
62-33 3/27/1979 |
P.L. 96-5 4/02/1979 |
$830 |
9/30/1979 |
|
219-198 9/26/1979 |
49-29 9/28/1979 |
P.L. 96-78 |
$879 |
5/31/1980 |
||
1980 |
Voice Vote 5/30/1980 |
47-10 5/30/1980 |
P.L. 96-256 5/30/1980 |
same |
6/5/1980 |
|
335-34 6/05/1980 |
68-10 6/06/1980 |
P.L. 96-264 6/06/1980 |
same |
6/30/1980 |
||
6/13/1980 (See notes column in Table 2) |
54-39 6/28/1980 |
P.L. 96-286 6/28/1980 |
$925 |
2/28/1981 |
||
6/13/1980 (See notes column in Table 2) |
Voice Vote 12/12/1981 |
P.L. 96-556 12/19/1980 |
$935.1 |
None |
||
1981 |
305-104 2/05/1981 |
73-18 2/06/1981 |
P.L. 97-2 2/07/1981 |
$985 |
9/30/1981 |
|
5/21/1981 (See notes column in Table 2) |
Voice Vote 9/29/1981 |
P.L. 97-48 9/30/1981 |
$999.8 |
9/30/1981 |
||
5/21/1981 (See notes column in Table 2) |
64-34 09/29/1981 |
P.L. 97-49 9/30/1981 |
$1,079.8 |
9/28/1981 |
||
1982 |
6/23/1982 (See notes column in Table 2) |
49-41 6/23/1982 |
P.L. 97-204 6/28/1982 |
$1,143.1 |
9/30/1982 |
|
6/23/1982 (See notes column in Table 2) |
50-41 9/23/1982 |
P.L. 97-270 9/30/1982 |
$1,290.2 |
9/30/1983 |
||
1983 |
Voice Vote 5/18/1983 |
51-41 5/25/1983 |
P.L. 98-34 5/26/1983 |
$1,389 |
None |
|
214-186 11/18/1983 |
Voice Vote 11/17/1983 |
P.L. 98-161 11/21/1983 |
$1,490 |
None |
||
1984 |
211-198 5/24/1984 |
Voice Vote 5/24/1984 |
P.L. 98-302 5/25/1984 |
$1,520 |
None |
|
208-202 6/29/1984 |
Voice Vote 6/29/1984 |
P.L. 98-342 7/06/1984 |
$1,573 |
None |
||
Unanimous Consent 10/01/1984 |
37-30 10/12/1984 |
P.L. 98-475 10/13/1984 |
$1,823.8 |
None |
||
1985 |
300-121 11/13/1985 |
Voice Vote 11/13/1985 |
P.L. 99-155 11/14/1985 |
$1,903.8 |
12/06/1985 |
|
271-154 12/11/1985 |
61-31 12/11/1985 |
P.L. 99-177 12/12/1985 |
$2,078.7 |
None |
||
1986 |
216-199 8/14/1986 |
36-35 8/15/1986 |
P.L. 99-384 8/21/1986 |
$2,111 |
None |
|
305-70 10/17/1986 |
61-25 10/17/1986 |
P.L. 99-509 10/21/1986 |
$2,300 |
5/15/1987 |
||
1987 |
296-124 5/13/1987 |
58-36 5/14/1987 |
P.L. 100-40 5/15/1987 |
$2,320 |
7/17/1987 |
|
263-155 7/29/1987 |
Voice Vote 7/29/1987 |
P.L. 100-80 7/30/1987 |
same |
8/06/1987 |
||
Voice Vote 8/07/1987 |
51-39 8/07/1987 |
P.L. 100-84 8/10/1987 |
$2,352 |
9/23/1987 |
||
230-176 9/22/1987 |
64-34 9/23/1987 |
P.L. 100-119 9/29/1987 |
$2,800 |
None |
||
1989 |
231-185 8/01/1989 |
Voice Vote 8/04/1989 |
P.L. 101-72 8/07/1989 |
$2,870 |
10/31/1989 |
|
11/07/1989 269-99 |
Voice Vote 11/07/1989 |
P.L. 101-140 11/08/1989 |
$3,122.7 |
None |
||
1990 |
247-172 8/03/1990 |
Voice Vote 8/03/1990 |
P.L. 101-350 8/09/1990 |
$3,195 |
10/02/1990 |
|
Voice Vote 9/30/1990 |
Unanimous Consent 09/30/1990 |
P.L. 101-405 10/02/1990 |
same |
10/06/1990 |
||
362-3 10/09/1990 |
Voice Vote 10/08/1990 |
P.L. 101-412 10/09/1990 |
same |
10/09/1990 |
||
379-37 10/18/1990 |
Voice Vote 10/19/1990 |
P.L. 101-444 10/19/1990 |
same |
10/24/1990 |
||
380-45 10/24/1990 |
Unanimous Consent 10/24/1990 |
P.L. 101-461 10/25/1990 |
same |
10/27/1990 |
||
283-49 10/27/1990 |
Voice Vote 10/27/1990 |
P.L. 101-467 10/28/1990 |
$3,230 |
11/05/1990 |
||
228-200 10/26/1990 |
54-45 10/27/1990 |
P.L. 101-508 11/05/1990 |
$4,145 |
None |
||
1993 |
237-177 4/02/1993 |
Unanimous Consent 4/05/1993 |
P.L. 103-12 4/06/1993 |
$4,370 |
09/30/1993 |
|
218-216 8/05/1993 |
51-50 8/06/1993 |
P.L. 103-66 8/10/1993 |
$4,900 |
None |
||
1996 |
396-0 2/01/1996 |
Unanimous Consent 2/01/1996 |
P.L. 104-103 02/08/1996 |
(See notes column in Table 3) |
03/15/1990 |
|
362-51 3/07/1996 |
Voice Vote 3/07/1996 |
P.L. 104-115 3/12/1996 |
(See notes column in Table 3) |
3/30/1990 |
||
328-91 3/28/1996 |
Unanimous Consent 3/28/1996 |
P.L. 104-121 3/29/1996 |
$5,500 |
None |
||
1997 |
346-85 07/30/1997 |
85-15 7/31/1997 |
P.L. 105-33 8/05/1997 |
$5,950 |
None |
|
2002 |
215-214-1 6/27/2002 |
68-29 6/11/2002 |
P.L. 107-199 6/28/2002 |
$6,400 |
None |
|
2003 |
216-211 |
53-44 5/23/2003 |
P.L. 108-24 5/27/2003 |
$7,384 |
None |
|
2004 |
208-204 11/18/2004 |
52-44 11/17/2004 |
P.L. 108-415 11/19/2004 |
$8,184 |
None |
|
2005 |
4/28/2005 (See notes column in Table 2) |
52-48 3/16/2005 |
P.L. 109-182 3/20/2006 |
$8,965 |
None |
|
2007 |
5/17/2007 (See notes column in Table 2) |
53-42 9/27/2007 |
P.L. 110-91 9/29/2007 |
$9,815 |
None |
|
2008 |
272-152 7/23/2008 |
72-13 7/26/2008 |
P.L. 110-289 7/30/2008 |
$10,615 |
None |
|
263-171 10/03/2008 |
74-25 10/1/2008 |
P.L. 110-343 10/3/2008 |
$11,315 |
None |
||
2009 |
246-183-1 2/13/2009 |
60-38 2/13/2009 |
P.L. 111-5 2/17/2009 |
$12,104 |
None |
|
218-214 12/16/2009 |
60-39 12/24/2009 |
P.L. 111-123 |
$12,394 |
None |
||
2010 |
233-187 2/04/2010 |
60-39 1/28/2010 |
P.L. 111-139 |
$14,294 |
None |
|
2011 |
269-161 8/01/2011 |
74-26 8/02/2011 |
P.L. 112-25 |
$16,394 |
None |
|
2013 |
285-144 01/23/2013 |
64-34 1/31/2013 |
P.L. 113-3 02/4/2013 |
(See notes column in Table 3) |
5/18/2013 |
|
2013 |
285-144 10/16/2013 |
81-18 10/16/2013 |
P.L. 113-46 10/17/2013 |
(See notes column in Table 3) |
2/07/2014 |
|
2014 |
221-201 2/11/2014 |
55-43 2/12/2014 |
P.L. 113-83 2/15/2014 |
(See notes column in Table 2) |
3/15/2015 |
|
2015 |
266-167 10/29/2015 |
65-35 10/30/2015 |
P.L. 114-74 11/02/2015 |
(See notes column in Table 3) |
3/15/2017 |
|
2017 |
316-90 9/08/2017 |
80-17 9/07/2017 |
P.L. 115-56 9/08/2017 |
(See notes column in Table 3) |
12/08/2017 |
|
2018 |
240-186 2/09/ |
71-28 2/09/ |
2/09/2018 |
See notes column in Table 3 |
3/01/2019 |
2019 |
284-149 7/25/2019 |
67-28 8/01/2019 |
P.L. 116-37 8/02/2019 |
See notes column in Table 3
8/01/2021 |
Sources: The LIS available at http://www.congress.gov, Annual Congressional Quarterly Almanac volumes, CRS Report RL31967, The Debt Limit: History and Recent Increases, by [author name scrubbed]D. Andrew Austin; and CRS Report 97-297, Debt Limit Increases, 1978 to 1996: Fact Sheet and Uses of the Debt Limit for Other Legislation (report is out of print; available to congressional clients from the author upon request). Enacted levels of Statutory Debt Limit were obtained from the FY2012 Budget Historical Tables volume, Table 7.3.
Notes: For more information on temporary and permanent increases, see Table 7.3 of the FY2012 Budget Historical Tables. Measures in Table 1 are organized by year of initial consideration of each measure.
a. P.L. 112-25, the Budget Control Act (BCA), included provisions allowing the debt limit to rise in three stages—up to $2.4 trillion—following certification by the President that the debt balance was within $100 billion of the current limit. The debt limit as of January 28, 2012, was $16.4 trillion. This $16.4 trillion figure included incremental increases of $400 billion (August 2, 2011), $500 billion (September 22, 2011), and $1.2 trillion (January 28, 2012). More information on stipulations for debt-limit increases included within P.L. 112-25 appears in CRS Report RL31967, The Debt Limit: History and Recent Increases, by [author name scrubbed]D. Andrew Austin.
Year of Enactment |
Bill Number |
Public Law Number & Date of Enactment |
Descriptive Notes on |
1978 |
P.L. 95-252 |
None |
|
P.L. 95-333 |
None |
||
1980 |
P.L. 96-256 |
None |
|
P.L. 96-286 |
On June 13, 1980, the day after Congress completed action on the FY1981 Budget Resolution, H.Con.Res. 307, its projected debt increase was incorporated into H.J.Res. 569, which was then deemed to have been passed by the House. The measure was enacted as P.L. 96-286 and included a temporary extension of the debt limit from June 30, 1980, to February 28, 1981. |
||
H.J.Res 570 |
P.L. 96-556 |
A debt limit increase was incorporated in H.Con.Res. 307, the FY1981 Budget Resolution passed by the House on June 12, 1980, by a vote of 205-195. H.J.Res 570 was enacted as P.L. 96-556. The enacted measure included a temporary extension of the debt limit from February 28, 1981, to September 30, 1981. |
|
1981 |
P.L. 97-2 |
None |
|
H.J.Res 266 |
P.L. 97-48 |
H.J.Res 266 was engrossed and deemed passed by the House on May 21, 1981. After passing the Senate, H.J.Res 266 was enacted as P.L. 97-48 on September 30, 1981. The measure raised the temporary debt limit without altering its September 30, 1981, expiration date. |
|
H.J.Res 265 |
P.L. 97-49 |
A debt limit figure from H.Con.Res. 307, the FY1981 Budget Resolution, was incorporated into H.J.Res 265 without a vote. P.L. 97-49 as enacted extended the temporary limit from September 30, 1981, to September 30, 1982. |
|
1982 |
H.J.Res 519 |
P.L. 97-204 |
S.Con.Res. 92, the FY1983 Budget Resolution, automatically incorporated respective debt limit increases in H.J.Res 519 and H.J.Res 520. Both measures were engrossed by the House on June 23, 1982. H.J.Res 520 also extended the temporary debt limit from September 30, 1982, to September 30, 1983. |
H.J.Res 520 |
P.L. 97-270 |
See notes above on H.J.Res 519. |
|
1983 |
H.J.Res 308 |
P.L. 98-161 |
None |
1984 |
P.L. 98-342 |
None |
|
H.J.Res 654 |
P.L. 98-475 |
None |
|
1986 |
P.L. 99-384 |
None |
|
1987 |
P.L. 100-40 |
None |
|
P.L. 100-80 |
None |
||
P.L. 100-84 |
None |
||
1990 |
P.L. 101-350 |
None |
|
P.L. 101-405 |
None |
||
1993 |
P.L. 103-12 |
None |
|
2002 |
P.L. 107-199 |
The House roll call votes on P.L. 107-199 included one Member voting "present." |
|
2003 |
H.J.Res 51 |
P.L. 108-24 |
On April 11, 2003, pursuant to Rule XXVII, H.J.Res 51 was deemed to have passed the House as a result of the adoption by the House and the Senate of the conference report for H.Con.Res. 95, the FY2004 Budget Resolution. |
2004 |
P.L. 108-415 |
None |
|
2006 |
H.J.Res 47 |
P.L. 109-182 |
H.J.Res 47 (P.L. 109-182) was passed pursuant to Rule XXVII and H.Con.Res. 95, the FY2006 Budget Resolution. |
2007 |
H.J.Res 43 |
P.L. 110-91 |
H.J.Res 43 (P.L. 110-91) was passed by the House pursuant to provisions in S.Con.Res. 21, the FY2008 Budget Resolution. |
2009 |
P.L. 111-123 |
None |
|
2014 |
P.L. 113-83 |
P.L. 113-83, the Temporary Debt Limit Extension Act, suspended the federal debt limit through March 15, 2015. |
Sources: Congress.gov; Annual Congressional Quarterly Almanac volumes; CRS Report RL31967, The Debt Limit: History and Recent Increases, by [author name scrubbed]D. Andrew Austin; and CRS Report 97-297, Debt Limit Increases, 1978 to 1996: Fact Sheet and Uses of the Debt Limit for Other Legislation (report is out of print; available to congressional clients from the author upon request).
Notes: Vote tally, enacted debt limit amounts, and other data are available in Table 1. Measures in Table 2 are organized by year of enactment.
Year of Enactment |
Bill Number |
Public Law Number & Date of Enactment |
Type of Measure |
Notes on the Measure |
||||
1979 |
P.L. 96-5 |
Change to debt limit included as provision within measure on other matters. |
P.L. 96-5 included an increase in savings bonds yields and required Congress and the President to present budgets that would be in balance for FY1981 and FY1982. See also H.Res. 183, a resolution concurring in amendments to H.R. 2534 as passed by the Senate. H.Res. 183 was passed by the House on April 2, 1979, by a vote of 209-165 (House Roll Vote #133). |
|||||
P.L. 96-78 |
Change to debt limit included within measure on other matters. |
P.L. 96-78 included an increase in the amount of long-term bonds that could be outstanding and established House Rule 49 making the increase in the debt limit part of the budget process (in the House). |
||||||
1980 |
P.L. 96-264 |
Change to debt limit included within measure on other matters. |
P.L. 96-264 included a repeal of the presidentially imposed oil import fee under Section 232(b) of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, 19 U.S.C. 18629(b). This legislation was passed over a presidential veto. |
|||||
1983 |
P.L. 98-34 |
Change to debt limit included within measure on other matters. |
P.L. 98-34 included making the whole debt limit permanent and increasing the amount of long-term bonds that could be issued. |
|||||
1984 |
P.L. 98-302 |
Change to debt limit included within measure on other matters. |
P.L. 98-302 included an increase in the amount of long-term bonds that could be issued and provided some miscellaneous administrative authority to the Secretary of the Treasury. |
|||||
1985 |
P.L. 99-155 |
Change to debt limit included within measure on other matters. |
P.L. 99-155 included a requirement to restore Social Security Trust Funds and to extend for a month a number of expiring acts, including a cigarette tax. |
|||||
H.J.Res 372 |
P.L. 99-177 |
Change in debt limit included as part of Balanced Budget and Deficit Reduction measure. |
H.J.Res 372, enacted as P.L. 99-177, was also a vehicle for the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Reduction Act of 1985. The legislation also required the Senate Finance Committee and the House Ways and Means Committee to report by July 1, 1986, legislation for alternative minimum corporate tax. |
|||||
1986 |
P.L. 99-509 |
Change to debt limit included in Budget Reconciliation measure. |
P.L. 99-509, the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986, included a debt limit increase to Section 8201 of Title VII of the act. Section 8201 also required the restoration of lost interest to certain trust funds. |
|||||
1987 |
H.J.Res 324 |
P.L. 100-119 |
Change in debt limit included as part of a Balanced Budget and Deficit Reduction measure. |
H.J.Res 324 was also used as the legislative vehicle for the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control and Reaffirmation Act of 1987. |
||||
1989 |
P.L. 101-72 |
Change to debt limit within measure on other matters. |
P.L. 101-72 included a change in the method of accounting for federal debt instruments. |
|||||
H.J.Res 280 |
P.L. 101-140 |
Change in debt limit included within measure on other matters. |
Pursuant to the provisions of H.Con.Res. 106, the FY1990 Budget Resolution, H.J.Res 280, was considered passed by the House on May 17, 1989. The House vote on the conference report for H.Con.Res. 106 was 241-185. P.L. 101-140 included a repeal of Section 89 nondiscrimination, rules that dealt with employee benefit plans. |
|||||
1990 |
H.J.Res 666 |
P.L. 101-412 |
Change in debt limit included within measure on other matters. |
H.J.Res 666 was a continuing appropriations measure that included a debt limit extension. The House initially passed the measure by a vote of 305-105 on October 7, 1990. The Senate took up the measure and then passed it by unanimous consent. The House then passed the Senate amended measure on October 9, 1990, by a vote of 362-3. The measure passed the Senate by unanimous consent on October 8, 1990, and was enacted as P.L. 101-412 on October 9, 1990 |
||||
H.J.Res 677 |
P.L. 101-444 |
Change in debt limit included in a continuing resolution. |
None |
|||||
H.J.Res 681 |
P.L. 101-461 |
Change in debt limit included in a continuing resolution. |
None |
|||||
H.J.Res 687 |
P.L. 101-467 |
Change in debt limit included in a continuing resolution. |
None |
|||||
P.L. 101-508 |
Change to debt limit included in Budget Reconciliation measure. |
A debt limit increase was included in Section 11901 of Title XI of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990, P.L. 101-508. |
||||||
1993 |
P.L. 103-66 |
Change to debt limit included in Budget Reconciliation measure. |
A debt limit increase was included in Section 13411 of Title XIII of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, P.L. 103-66. |
|||||
1996 |
P.L. 104-103 |
Addressed parameters and temporary exemptions of certain Social Security related funds from the debt limit. |
P.L. 104-103 temporarily exempted from limit obligations in an amount equal to the monthly insurance benefits payable under Title II of the Social Security Act in March 1996. The exemption was set to expire in the event of an increase in the debt limit or by March 15, 1996. |
|||||
P.L. 104-115 |
Addressed parameters and temporary exemptions of certain Social Security related funds from the debt limit. |
P.L. 104-115 temporarily exempted from limit obligations in an amount equal to the monthly insurance benefits payable under Title II of the Social Security Act in March 1996 and certain obligations issued to trust funds and other federal government accounts. The exemption was set to expire on the earlier of an increase in the limit or by March 30, 1996. |
||||||
H.R. 3136 |
P.L. 104-121 |
Change to debt limit within measure on other matters. |
P.L. 104-121, the Contract with America Advancement Act, included an increase in the debt limit in Title III. |
|||||
1997 |
P.L. 105-33 |
Change to the debt limit included in Balanced Budget measure. |
P.L. 105-33, the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, included a debt limit increase in Title V, Subtitle G. |
|||||
2008 |
P.L. 110-289 |
Change to debt limit included within measure on other matters. |
H.R. 3221 (P.L. 110-289), the Housing and Economic Recovery Act, included an increase to the debt limit. |
|||||
2008 |
P.L. 110-343 |
Change to debt limit included within measure on other matters. |
H.R. 1424 (P.L. 110-343), the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008, included an increase to the debt limit. |
|||||
2009 |
P.L. 111-5 |
Change to debt limit included within measure on other matters. |
H.R. 1 (P.L. 111-5), the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, included an increase to the debt limit. |
|||||
2010 |
H.J.Res 45 |
P.L. 111-139 |
Change to debt limit included within measure on other matters. |
During final consideration of H.J.Res 45, the House took up a portion of the bill passed by the Senate with an amendment that included an increase to the debt limit and passed this portion of the measure on February 4, 2010. The bill also included provisions related to "Statutory PAYGO," and elimination of "duplicative and wasteful spending." |
||||
2011 |
P.L. 112-25 |
Change to debt limit included within measure addressing deficit reduction. |
Final legislation was in the form of a House amendment in the nature of a substitute to a previously unrelated Senate bill. The Budget Control Act of 2011 as enacted includes provisions aimed at deficit reduction and an increase of up to $2.4 trillion that would occur in several stages. |
|||||
2013 |
P.L. 113-3 |
Suspended the federal debt limit temporarily. Other matters within the measure address the annual budget resolution. |
P.L. 113-3 temporarily suspended the statutory federal debt limit through May 18, 2013, and allowed the federal government to continue to borrow beyond the $16,394 billion limit set under provisions within P.L. 112-25, the Budget Control Act of 2011. Additional provisions required House and Senate payroll administrators to hold all Member salary compensation if by April 15, 2013, that chamber had not agreed to a concurrent budget resolution for FY2014. The Treasury Department reset the debt limit at $16,699 billion once the debt limit suspension period lapsed. |
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P.L. 113-46 |
Suspended the federal debt limit temporarily. Provisions included in Division B of the FY2014 Continuing Resolution Act. |
Division B of P.L. 113-46 temporarily suspended the federal debt limit through February 7, 2014. On October 17, 2013, as part of P.L. 113-46, a measure providing continuing appropriations for FY2014, the debt limit was suspended again until February 7, 2014. |
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2015 |
P.L. 114-74 11/02/2015 |
Suspension of the debt limit included within measure addressing deficit reduction. |
P.L. 114-74 temporarily suspended the debt limit through March 15, 2017. The measure also amended certain budget enforcement provisions of the Budget Control Act of 2011 (P.L. 112-25). On March 16, 2017, the Treasury Department reset the debt limit at $19,809 billion. |
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2017 |
H.R. 601 |
P.L. 115-56 9/08/2017 |
Suspension of the debt limit included in an FY2018 continuing appropriations resolution and an FY2017 disaster relief supplemental appropriations measure. |
Division C of P.L. 115-56 temporarily suspended the debt limit through December 8, 2017. On September 8, 2017, the Treasury Department reset the debt limit at $20,456 billion. |
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2018 |
H.R. 1892 |
P.L. 115-123 2/09/2018 |
Suspension of the debt limit included along with FY2018 continuing appropriations resolutions in the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018. The measure also included, among other matters, health care and tax benefit provisions, and supplemental disaster assistance funding. |
Title III, §30301, included a temporary suspension of the debt limit through March 1, 2019. On March 1, 2019, the Treasury Department reset the debt limit at $21,988 billion.
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2019
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P.L. 116-37 8/02/2019
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Suspension of the debt limit included in P.L. 116-37, the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019 that raised discretionary budget caps for FY2020 and FY2021 under P.L. 112-25, the Budget Control Act of 2011. Section 301 of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019 suspends the federal debt limit through August 1, 2021. |
Sources: Congress.gov; Annual Congressional Quarterly Almanac volumes; CRS Report RL31967, The Debt Limit: History and Recent Increases, by [author name scrubbed]D. Andrew Austin; and CRS Report 97-297, Debt Limit Increases, 1978 to 1996: Fact Sheet and Uses of the Debt Limit for Other Legislation (report is out of print; available to congressional clients from the author upon request).
Notes: Vote tally, enacted debt limit amounts, and other data are available in Table 1. Measures in Table 3 are organized by year of enactment.
CRS Report R44874, The Budget Control Act: Frequently Asked Questions, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed]Grant A. Driessen and Megan S. Lynch.
CRS Report RL31967, The Debt Limit: History and Recent Increases, by [author name scrubbed]D. Andrew Austin.
CRS Report R43389, The Debt Limit Since 2011, by [author name scrubbed]D. Andrew Austin.
CRS Report RS21519, Legislative Procedures for Adjusting the Public Debt Limit: A Brief Overview, by [author name scrubbed]
Author Contact Information
1. |
See also CRS Report R43389, The Debt Limit Since 2011, by |
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3. |
More detailed information on methods employed by Congress to adjust the statutory debt limit appear in CRS Report RS21519, Legislative Procedures for Adjusting the Public Debt Limit: A Brief Overview, by |
4. |
Complete House and Senate roll call vote information is available in Congress.gov back to1993. Bill number and public law links in Table 1 connect to bill summary and status information for all measures back to 1978. For the measures listed from 1993 to the present, Member roll call votes can be extracted from the Congress.gov bill summary and status display by clicking on the actions tab and online links provided to the House and Senate roll call information. |
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Table 3 provides brief background information on whether measures were considered as other than stand-alone bills, either containing a change to the debt limit as part of a measure dealing with other matters (including omnibus or consolidated measures or part of continuing resolutions) or pursuant to House rules or budget resolution and budget reconciliation activities. |