Talks on raising the debt ceiling took an unscheduled break today. In the morning, Republican negotiators abruptly walked away from the bargaining table, only to say this evening that they were going back. They said they had paused the talks because the White House hadnút moved far enough in the Republicansú direction on spending cuts. In the days before this, both House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and President Biden sounded optimistic. The president is monitoring develops 7,000 miles and 13 time zones away in Japan, where heús attending the G7 Summit. The President is due back at the White House late Sunday night, earlier than it planned, and will be available to meet in person with the speaker. The two sides are racing a deadline. They have to have a deal in time for Congress to pass it before the treasury runs out of money to pay for everything from Social Security and Medicare benefits to military salaries. That could be as early as June 1st. Joining me to discuss this and more, Kayla Tausche, CNBCús Senior White House Correspondent, and here in the studio, Fin Gomez, CBS News Political Director, Carl Hulse, The New York Times Chief Washington Correspondent, and Seung Min Kim, who covers the White House for the Associated Press. Well, weúre just getting word that theyúve already broken for the night and there is no set time for another meeting. And some of the negotiators are sounding pretty pessimistic that theyúre going to meet the weekend deadline for having something the framework in place. Carl, I know youúve seen a lot of these Capitol Hill negotiations. I donút know if youúve ever seen anything like this today, but do we have any idea or any sense about why the Republicans left and why they came back? CARL HULSE, Chief Washington Correspondent, The New York Times: I think thereús a performative aspect to this. The Republicans, they need to show that theyúre fighting for everything they can. The speaker is under pressure from the right. The Freedom Caucus, the hard right conservative element of the House Republican majority, has already said they wonút vote for anything until the Senate approves the House bill, which, of course, wonút happen. But I do think thereús - - so, some of this is to show, hey, weúre tough. This is how congressional negotiations go up and down, up and down. But there are some real differences and how you cap the spending, what spending exactly you cap, how long those caps go. The contours of the deal are there but getting the details is hard, and I think thatús what theyúre doing right now. But theyúve got a few days still to work it out and weúll have to see what happens. JOHN YANG: Kayla, what are they saying at the White House and how big a complication is it to have the president 13 time zones away so heús ending his day as talks begin? KAYLA TAUSCHE, Senior White House Correspondent, CNBC: Well, John, it certainly overshadowed any big picture conversations and publicity the White House hoped to garner back home for big picture issues, like Ukraine and like China, because this is all anyone is talking about. And his aides are briefing him around the clock. And when he holds his press conference in the early morning hours on Sunday morning East Coast time, this is all the reporters are going to be asking him about, is whether heús spoken to House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, what his aides are telling him about whether thereús a deal and what the path forward is once he returns to Washington. When I spoke to White House officials today, they were unbowed by what the Republicans were doing, walking out of the meetings and suggesting that the administration was being unreasonable. They said, look, the president understands that the GOP also has an issue with its whip count. The GOP canút deliver this deal on its own and they need to understand that in order to get Democratic votes that the administration has to deliver on some of its priorities, too. This official telling me they canút get everything they want, and so both sides are sort of -- theyúre hurrying to their farther out wings, as Carl was just mentioning, but at the same time, the White House seems to be acknowledging, look, this is going to be a deal thatús made in the center, and thatús where weúre going to stay. JOHN YANG: Seung Min, this is a deal that not everyone is going to be happy with, but weúve heard President Bidenús red lines, the things that he will not give in on. Any idea, any sense of what the White House is willing to give on and maybe what the Republicans are willing to give on? SEUNG MIN KIM, White House Reporter, The Associated Press: So, one interesting element thatús really caused ripples, especially among Democrats this week, is the issue of these tougher work requirements for some federal aid programs, such as SNAP, which is that food stamps program, and TANF, which is the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families. I was actually traveling with President Biden over the weekend at his beach home in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, and we asked him in the middle of his bike ride, he did come over and talk to the press, we asked him about these updates on the debt negotiations. And I asked him, would you be open to tougher work requirements on some of these federal aid programs, which is what Republicans have demanded? And, surprisingly, he said yes. Heús noted that he had voted for tougher laws that were in place now as part of that welfare reform bill back in 1996. He says Medicaid is a red line for him. Heús not going to do anything that gets rid of anyoneús health care coverage. But on the other issues, he said, look, letús see what the Republicans have got. And that caused a lot of concern on Capitol Hill this week, particularly among progressive lawmakers who really want to protect these programs as much as possible. Itús that dynamic that weúve discussed earlier that no matter what deal it is, there will need to be a lot of Democratic votes. So, you canút give too much on Democratic priorities. But I will say that President Biden has been asked this multiple times since Sunday and he keeps saying over and over that he is open to some changes depending on what they are. He wants to hear from Republicans first. So, in terms of a possible compromise on what kind of give the White House can give on Republican priorities, thatús that. But, certainly, they are worried about freezing spending levels for a long period of time. Thatús not something that they will agree to that Republicans are demanding. There are some other kind of more out there demands, like I know some conservative Republicans are asking to add their border bill to the debt limit. Thatús not going to happen. So, just look at some changes to potential federal aid programs and then look at how long do you kind of set these spending levels and how low they go. JOHN YANG: Fin, Carl said that the Freedom Caucus, the ultra conservative Freedom Caucus probably wonút be happy with what comes out of these negotiations. And Seung Min said the progressives on the Democratic side probably wonút be happy. How do they pass this? FIN GOMEZ, Political Director, CBS News: I think thatús a really great question. I think I donút necessarily have that answer. But I will say there is so much drama here, John. Itús like a telenovela, frankly. And the President and McCarthy run the risk of inflaming the ire of the wings of both their respective parties, right? One Republican told me just before I got here that McCarthy is between Iraq and the MAGA base, right? And he is, because if he gives up too much territory politically, he can really face a backlash there. And we are in a presidential cycle and he has a tenuous hold on that leadership. And that Freedom Caucus that we were talking about, they have ties to former President Trump and to that MAGA based electorate that we were talking about. And just one other point that Carl brought up in his great piece today, but that in previous standoffs, when it implodes, itús usually the party thatús in power, the power in charge of control of Congress, right? But this time around, per recent polling, thereús that Washington Post poll that came out, like both parties would share the blame and a lot of independents would be upset if this thing falls apart, John. CARYL HULSE: One thing to watch while weúre talking about that is can Kevin McCarthy keep a majority of his majority, that sort of the threshold where he has to be at and probably not face a challenge? The other big question is does the hard right just say weúre not going to vote for it and let it lie or do they attack the plan? And then I will say, on the Democratic side, there is a lot of memories about Joe Bidenús negotiating on Capitol Hill, and they havenút always been happy with what heús come up with. And I think thereús some nervousness among people. Itús like Joe Biden, donút give away the store, again, SEUNG MIN KIM: I think with all this talk about how angry will Republicans be, how angry will Democrats be, I kind of have, like, two basic rules of thumb for these bipartisan fiscal negotiation. One is that, which we saw today, thereús always a bad meeting before a good meeting. And the second one is once there is a deal, if everyone hates it, it probably will pass because you have enough sort of people in the middle who know they have to do this for the goodness of the country, or for whatever reason, that youúll have kind of the far planks of the right and the left reject it for their own ideological reasons. But if no one loves it, it probably has a good shot of passing. JOHN YANG: Carl, you were talking about Speaker McCarthy, and early in the week, you had a story in The New York Times talking about how McCarthy was just dying to get to go head to head with President Biden. Now that heús got his wish, heús doing it, how has this affected his standing, his stature, both inside the House and outside? CARL HULSE: I mean, I think there was a perception among the Republicans and certainly among -- with Kevin McCarthy that he wasnút being given credit for what heús done so far. I mean, the expectations, honestly, for Speaker McCarthy were pretty low because he had to fight for the job, 15 ballots. But heús managed to get some legislation through. Itús not going anywhere in the Senate, but heús held his folks together and he wanted to get up there right with the president. He also wanted Chuck Schumer sidelined on the negotiations. The Republicans saw Schumer as a detriment to their cause. So, I think McCarthy is feeling pretty good right now, but heús got a tough week coming. JOHN YANG: And Seung Min, on the other hand, on the Democratic side, the president, for a long time, said he was not going to negotiate with the debt ceiling as a threat hanging over his head, and as you say, there are worries that heús going to give away the store. What is his standing in the party? What does this do to his stature? SEUNG MIN KIM: Well, right now, I mean, I think there are a group of Democrats that recognize that Biden, the president has to do what he can to avert a debt default while protecting priorities. But you have seen some anger from, again, progressive House Democrats this week that say this is precisely why you do not negotiate with someone, a group of people who are willing to hold something as serious as the debt limit hostage because then you kind of get pulled into negotiating over spending levels or how far the debt limit runs, like whether it goes past the election or on tougher work requirements. But at the same time, the White House isnút left with a lot of options here because they do not want to default. Democrats do not want to default. Some/most Republicans donút want to default and because they know what the dire consequences would be. So, when they are afraid of those consequences, they are going to be willing to talk to them to see how you can avert that. Now, I will say the White House continues to say that theyúre not negotiating on the debt limit, that they are actually negotiating on the budget and spending and the debt limit just happens to be coincidentally happening. But we know in reality thatús not the case. JOHN YANG: He said that when he talked to reporters on Wednesday that the debt limit -- donút worry folks, the debt limit is going to be raised, weúre dealing with these other issues, is that the way they look at it on the Hill? CARL HULSE: No. Obviously thatús a distinction without a difference. Theyúre negotiating and Chuck Schumer has even said weúre negotiating on this. So, no, theyúre not looking at it that way at all. JOHN YANG: Kayla, rather, at the White House, is anybody saying any privately aides wondering whether they might have underestimated McCarthy going into this? KAYLA TAUSCHE: Well, that was certainly the takeaway, John. When McCarthy passed his bill a few weeks ago and was able to corral his caucus ever so slyly -- shyly to get that vote and get that bill across the finish line. I think that caught the White House flat footed because the presidentús message up until that time had been Iúll show you my budget and you show me yours. And he put out his budget in early March and had hoped that the. Republicans would not be able to get their act together to put an entire budget together. And while they never released a full budget plan, they did pass that bill. And when the White House was asked at that point repeatedly, okay, so is this a plan? Does the White House now need to respond? They said, no, thatús not a plan. Itús just a collection of policies. This is not a budget. We asked for a budget. And it then became a very semantic argument, but it put the ball in McCarthyús court. And when I talked to one of his aides and I said, whatús the status, how are you feeling going into these negotiations, right before the first meeting of the core four congressional negotiators and the president and his top staff, and they said, look, at this point, Senator McConnell, whoús a longtime friend of President Bidenús, I think there was some hope at the White House that perhaps McConnell would be the White knight. And McConnell said, Iúm going to stand next to Speaker McCarthy, he needs to deliver his conference on this. And this McCarthy aide told me thatús the ballgame. So, it really empowered the Republicans going into these negotiations, and theyúre the ones who set the agenda with the topics and the items that they were willing to discuss in these negotiations. And now the White House is having to figure out where it stands and what it can get out of this and try to save face on messaging going forward, too. JOHN YANG: Fin could this -- however this turns out, however this comes out, could this affect the reelection, President Bidenús re-election bid? Could there be aftershocks from this that go all the way to 2024? FIN GOMEZ: In a word, yes, especially if this blows back in Democrats and in the presidentús face, essentially. But if it does, if it seems like heús given too much ground again, and youúve seen how the progressives are reacting to any sort of really fluidity with these negotiations, yes, he does have that. There is that risk. Itús still early, but, yes, absolutely. CARL HULSE: Presidents are judged on the performance of the economy. Itús just one of those things, and even if you canút control it and I think theyúre worried about that. We donút know what a default would look like, but we certainly think we know, and itús not good for the economy. JOHN YANG: Well, his likely or the front runner for the Republican nomination spoke up today. Donald Trump said on Truth Social, Republicans should not make a deal on the debt sailing unless they get everything they want, including the kitchen sink. Thatús the way the Democrats have always dealt with us. Do not fold. Fin, you mentioned the Freedom Caucus, but does Trump bring any other Republicans along with him on this? FIN GOMEZ: Well, I think the Freedom Caucus, they are directly tied to the former president, and I think they listen to that into the former president, especially going into this presidential cycle where he is heús the clear front runner in this early stage of this cycle. So, absolutely, his words go a long way, and I think they will continue to. And despite Speaker McCarthy being the head of Republicans on Capitol Hill, he is still the de facto standard bearer of that party.