Republicans advance Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ in unusual late-night vote
- House Republicans narrowly advanced a 1,116-page tax and spending package late Sunday, aiming to meet a Memorial Day deadline in Washington, D.C.
- The vote followed intense negotiations due to conservative demands for faster Medicaid and green energy cuts and unresolved details in the bill.
- The package permanently extends 2017 tax cuts, adds temporary new tax breaks, and requires $1.5 trillion in spending cuts to fund border security and deportations.
- House Majority Leader Steve Scalise announced that the implementation of employment conditions for certain Medicaid recipients will be moved up to early 2027, ahead of the originally planned 2029 schedule.
- If passed by the House this week, the bill will move to the Senate amid stiff Republican divisions and strong Democratic opposition over health and food program cuts.
485 Articles
485 Articles
The Latest: Trump goes to Capitol Hill to rally divided Republicans around his 'big beautiful bill'
President Donald Trump goes to Capitol Hill on Tuesday seeking to unify divided House Republicans on the multitrillion-dollar “big, beautiful bill” that's now at risk ahead of collapsing ahead of planned votes this week. Trump also hosted the Kennedy Center’s…


Chip Roy Spells Out What He Wants Before and if He Approves Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’
(DCNF)—Republican Texas Rep. Chip Roy said Monday on Fox Business that he would like President Donald Trump’s “one big, beautiful bill” to address “deficit numbers” and tax policy before giving his approval on it. Late Sunday, the House Budget Committee narrowly pushed through the president’s budget reconciliation package, with Roy among three other conservatives who pushed back against approving the legislation and voted “present.” While discus…
Cutting Military Spending Would Make for a Big and Beautiful Bill - LewRockwell
Last week, Moody’s Ratings lowered the United States credit rating. Fitch Ratings and S&P Global Ratings had already lowered the US rating. This new downgrade was driven by Congress’s failure to make any efforts to reduce the almost 37 trillion dollars national debt. When Moody’s made its announcement, the House Budget Committee was scrambling to get the votes to pass legislation extending the 2017 tax cuts. President Trump has dubbed this the “…
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