USPS Faces Imminent Cash Crisis Unless Congress Acts to Preserve National Mail Service
The U.S. Postal Service warns it will run out of cash within a year without lifting its $15 billion borrowing cap—threatening the critical mail delivery network Americans rely on.
The United States Postal Service (USPS), an historic pillar of American infrastructure and commerce, stands at the brink of a financial crisis that demands urgent congressional intervention. Postmaster General David Steiner has sounded the alarm: if lawmakers do not repeal decades-old restrictions preventing the agency from borrowing beyond $15 billion, USPS will exhaust its cash reserves by February 2027. This warning is no mere bureaucratic complaint—it strikes at the heart of America’s sovereignty and economic stability. Every household, business, and community depends on reliable six-day-a-week mail delivery, yet USPS operates under government mandates without federal appropriations or flexibility to adjust...
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