Over the past several weeks, Americans (not to mention the market) were forced to grapple with the latest example of congressional infighting and outright legislative gridlock as US lawmakers narrowly averted a government shutdown in the wake of House Speaker John Boehner’s surprise resignation.

Now, the debt ceiling battle looms ahead of Boehner’s October 30 exit and according to Treasury Secretary Jack Lew, the US will run out of money to pay its bills far sooner than originally expected – November 5, to be exact. Here’s WSJ:

The government will run out of money to pay its bills sooner than previously thought, forcing Republican lawmakers who are already scrambling to elect new leaders to immediately confront a series of unpopular fiscal deadlines.

Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said the government would be left with just $30 billion cash on or around Nov. 5. Government outlays can be twice that level on certain weekdays, underscoring the need to raise the federal borrowing limit, Mr. Lew said in a letter late Thursday to House Speaker John Boehner (R., Ohio).

“Without sufficient cash, it would be impossible for the United States of America to meet all of its obligations for the first time in our history,” Mr. Lew said in the letter.

The new debt-ceiling deadline falls less than a week after Mr. Boehner will leave Congress, putting pressure on him—and an incoming Republican leadership team—to pass legislation raising the limit before that transition. Some congressional estimates had indicated the government could get by without action until December. Traders and Wall Street analysts are watching the timeline closely due to the turbulence that hits financial markets as debt-limit deadlines approach.

And so, the stage is once again set for GOP lawmakers to use the debt ceiling as a negotiating tool in an effort to extract concessions from the White House while the rest of the world looks on incredulous at the spectacle the US creates when its lawmakers effectively blackmail themselves by threatening to force the nation into default in order to secure a bit more bargaining power.

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