House, Senate set for clash over Trump bill
- Senate Republicans are pushing to pass President Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill' by the July Fourth deadline in Washington, D.C.
- The bill builds on the 2017 tax cuts and includes deeper Medicaid cuts and a $5 trillion federal debt limit increase, stirring intra-party conflicts.
- Key concerns focus on Medicaid changes harming rural hospitals and the low $10,000 SALT deduction cap, which House Republicans fiercely oppose.
- A GOP senator said the bill is now 'further away than we were before,' while Senate Minority Leader Schumer warned it risks stripping coverage from 16 million people.
- The Senate faces a difficult vote with some Republicans opposing the bill, suggesting the July Fourth target may be missed and negotiations will continue.
119 Articles
119 Articles
Senate's proposed changes to the One, Big Beautiful Bill alarm Louisiana hospitals
WASHINGTON – Representatives of Louisiana’s largest hospitals converged Tuesday on Capitol Hill after a Senate committee released its recommendations to squeeze more spending cuts out of Medicaid than the House did in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
Trump's Favorite Fox News Flunky Affirms that the 'Big Beautiful Bull' Has Steep Medicaid Cuts
On May 22, 2025, the House of Representatives passed - by a single vote - what Trump preposterously named the "Big Beautiful Bill:" a budget hodge-podge of ultra-rightist economic reforms that advance the conservative agenda of enriching the already...
Capitol Hill civil war: US Senate, House on collision course over Trump’s ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’
Though most Senate Republicans exited a closed-door briefing without publicly opposing the measure, several are raising serious concerns, casting doubt on whether the bill has enough support to pass
House, Senate set for clash over Trump bill
Morning Report is The Hill’s a.m. newsletter. Sign up here or subscribe in the box below: President Trump’s second-term legislative agenda is experiencing a Senate GOP makeover that puts Republicans on a collision course with their House colleagues. The approach drafted by Republican members of the powerful Senate Finance Committee and introduced to colleagues during…
Ohio elected leaders joined hundreds nationwide to oppose federal budget bill
U.S. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., right, and Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., hold a press conference on the Republican budget resolution at the U.S. Capitol on April 10, 2025 in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images)Elected leaders from the Ohio Statehouse to local school boards have signed on to a national letter opposing the federal budget bill currently being considered by the U.S. Senate. More than …
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