Senate to begin marathon vote series on Trump's "big, beautiful bill" as GOP eyes July 4 deadline
- Senators began a marathon vote session on Monday in Washington, D.C., regarding President Trump's 940-page "One Big Beautiful Bill Act."
- The vote-a-rama process allows unlimited amendments and forced back-to-back votes as Republicans race to meet a July 4 deadline amid tenuous GOP support.
- The bill proposes approximately $4 trillion in tax reductions, allocates $350 billion toward border and national security, and implements $1.2 trillion in cuts to Medicaid and food stamps, leading to intense debate and resistance.
- According to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, the bill is projected to add nearly $3.3 trillion to the deficit over the next decade and result in 11.8 million additional uninsured Americans by the year 2034.
- The bill's uncertain future includes GOP opposition, House approval requirements, and Democrats aiming to hold Republicans politically accountable through recorded votes.
263 Articles
263 Articles
Trump Releases Statement on Senate Passage of 'Big Beautiful Bill' - Warns House GOP to Ignore "Grandstanders" and Pass Bill
President Trump on Tuesday afternoon released a statement on the Senate passage of his ‘Big Beautiful Bill.’ The Senate passed the reconciliation bill 51-50 (with Vance as the tie-breaker) on Tuesday.
Senate passes Trump's big tax, spending cuts as Vance breaks 50-50 tie
WASHINGTON — Senate Republicans hauled President Donald Trump's big tax breaks and spending cuts bill to passage Tuesday by the narrowest of margins, pushing past opposition from Democrats and their own GOP ranks — including Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky…
Schumer Forces Name Change Of ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ Before Senate Vote
Moments before the Senate passed President Donald Trump’s sweeping tax and spending package, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer succeeded in stripping the bill of its Trump-given title, “One Big Beautiful Bill.” Schumer argued the title violated the Byrd Rule — Section 313 B1A of the Congressional Budget Act — which prohibits “extraneous matter” in budget legislation. The bill will now be referred to simply as “the act.” I just forced Republic…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 54% of the sources are Center
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium