Trump’s 'Big, Beautiful Bill' Clears Senate After A 51–50 Vote | JD Vance Breaks Tie
Trump’s sweeping budget package narrowly clears the Senate — 51-50! Vice President JD Vance casts the historic tie-breaking vote as the Senate approves the controversial 'Big, Beautiful Bill'. The bill: • Extends Trump-era tax cuts • Adds new breaks for tips & overtime • Boosts military and immigration enforcement • Raises debt ceiling by $5 trillion • Slashes Medicaid & food aid by $930 billion • Eliminates green energy subsidies • Could add $3.3 trillion to the national debt over a decade Critics say it favors billionaires and corporations while gutting social programs. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer called it a “big, ugly betrayal.” Despite three Republican defections, JD Vance broke the deadlock. Now the bill heads back to the House of Representatives for final approval ahead of Trump’s July 4th deadline. Will the House cave or kill it? Can Trump sign this before Independence Day?
In this video:
• Why the vote was tied • JD Vance’s pivotal role • The bill’s biggest winners & losers • How this shapes 2026 elections
So the GOP are apparently redoing the House Text of the Spending Bill:
House Republicans need to make sure their package passes muster with the Senate rules.
House to make fixes to GOP megabill to avoid ‘fatal’ ruling with Senate parliamentarian
House Republicans need to make sure their package passes muster with the Senate rules.
From post:
House Republicans will try to fix issues with their megabill in the Rules Committee this week based on provisions the Senate parliamentarian has identified as non-compliant with the chamber’s rules, according to five people with direct knowledge of the plans.
Republicans need to send their massive tax and spending package to the Senate to make its own changes. But without making certain revisions to the House-passed bill first, it could run afoul of the chamber’s parliamentarian.
In the words of one senior House GOP aide, granted anonymity to speak candidly, certain House-approved provisions could prove “fatal” to the bill’s ability to comply with the rules surrounding the filibuster-skirting budget reconciliation process, which Republicans are relying upon to pass their domestic policy measure without Democratic votes.
House GOP leaders are currently working through the bill text and will either strike small pieces of the legislation or drop certain sections altogether.
One provision the parliamentarian has raised concerns about is a clearinghouse to crack down on duplicative food aid, Medicaid and other safety net benefits, according to two other people aware of the emerging plan. This issue is currently in limbo between two panel jurisdictions.
Among the many rules Senate Republicans must adhere to in a reconciliation bill is that it can’t include a policy that falls outside the jurisdiction of one of the committees empowered through the budget resolution Republicans approved in April to set parameters for the larger package. It also can’t include a policy that would affect federal spending, when the committee in question was instructed to change revenue.
Lawmakers will work within the House Rules Committee to make these tweaks, according to the people, inserting the new language into an unrelated rule which the panel will adopt Tuesday to govern floor consideration for other legislation.
That tactic would negate the need to have House Republicans vote on the party-line tax and spending package as a standalone measure, when passing the bill the first time around through a razor-thin GOP majority was a painful enough episode for leadership.
The GOP plan to make technical corrections to the megabill inside the Rules Committee was first reported by Punchbowl News.
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So, it sounds like they’re going back and altering or removing controversial parts of the House text in order to avoid conflict with the Parliamentarian.
I should note that Senate Majority Leader Thune was asked about going against the Parliamentarian in an interview sometime within the past week and responded with “We’re not going there” but time will tell if he keeps his word.
Anyway I hope that Section 70302, (that awful provision targeting courts from issuing contempt if there was no bond paid which also applied retroactively so you can see the issue), is one the things struck out here.
If not I hope it’s taken down by the Senate Judiciary Committee or that the Dems raise a point of contention against it to the Parliamentarian herself.
Manchin called out by climate change's powerful voice: 'A modern-day villain who drives a Maserati and lives on a yacht courtesy of the coal industry'
Manchin called out by climate change’s powerful voice: ‘A modern-day villain who drives a Maserati and lives on a yacht courtesy of the coal industry’
“‘[Sen. Joe Manchin] is a modern-day villain, who drives a Maserati, lives on a yacht courtesy of the coal industry, and is willing to see the world burn as long as it benefits his near-term investment portfolio.’”
That’s a swing from oft-quoted Pennsylvania State University scientist and published author Michael Mann, responding Friday to reports that Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia would get…
"Budget Buster - Reckless Abandonment" posted on March 29, 2018 to: https://ronaldpawley.wordpress.com/ “The same undisciplined government spending and social engineering that has undermined our economy over the past 30 years has also been tearing at the social fabric of this land.” Stockwell Day