• Editor’s Pick
  • Investing
  • Economy
  • Stock
  • Politics
Income Researchers
EconomyEditor's Pick

Senators enter marathon vote-a-rama as Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ deadline barrels near

by June 30, 2025
June 30, 2025

Senate Republicans are inching closer to a final vote on President Donald Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill,’ but face one more obstacle before lawmakers go on record on the president’s ambitious agenda.

Lawmakers wrapped up several hours of debate on the megabill that began Sunday afternoon and petered out early Monday morning. The next hurdle is the marathon ‘vote-a-rama,’ when lawmakers on either side of the aisle can submit an unlimited number of amendments to the bill.

Senate Republicans will use the time to further change and mold the bill to sate holdouts, while Democrats will inflict as much pain, and burn as much time as possible, with amendments designed to kneecap or outright kill the legislation.

The debate was largely a predictably partisan affair filled with floor charts, impassioned gesticulating fists and pleas to either pass or nuke the bill.

Senate Democrats railed against the bill for its slew of changes to Medicaid, green energy tax subsidies and how the bill, particularly its design to make Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Job act permanent, would balloon the federal deficit.

Republicans lauded the ‘big, beautiful bill’ for the growth it could supercharge in the country, and in particular, how important it was to prevent the president’s first-term tax cuts from lapsing.

‘I say to everybody in America who’s been hearing all of the politics of fear, about what we’re doing here and running up the deficit, [they] need to remember that only in Washington, D.C., is the refusal to raise your taxes an increase in the deficit,’ Senate Finance Committee Chair Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, said. ‘And we’re not going to let that happen.’

Lawmakers kicked off the debate with a back and forth on whether Senate Budget Committee Chair Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., or the Senate parliamentarian had the authority to dictate if Republicans could use the current policy baseline, the budget gimmick the GOP argues would negate their tax bill from ballooning the deficit, or current law, which would show the real cost of Trump’s tax package over the next decade.

‘Republicans can use whatever budgetary gimmicks they want to try and make the math work on paper, but you can’t paper over the real-life consequences of adding tens of trillions to the debt,’ said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.  

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released two sets of scores Saturday and Sunday that reflected both current policy and current law. Under current policy, the bill would tack on just over $507 billion over the next decade. But under current law, the package would add roughly $3.3 trillion.

Graham countered that as budget chair, he has the right to set the numbers.

‘The resolution we’re operating under to get us here, we voted to make that the case so we’re not doing anything sneaky,’ he said. ‘We actually voted to give me the authority to do this, and it passed.’

Graham also went to bat for the GOP’s planned cuts to Medicaid, which they have presented as efforts to root out waste, fraud and abuse in the program by instilling work requirements, booting illegal migrants off the benefit rolls, and making changes to just how much the federal government would pay states.

He argued that since former President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act became law, Medicaid has grown exponentially, largely because Obama ‘incentivized’ states to opt in to the Medicaid expansion program and allowed for able-bodied working-age adults to get onto the benefit rolls, something he noted that Medicaid was ‘never intended’ to do.  

‘It’s a good thing for the individual involved to be working,’ he said. ‘It’s a good thing for the taxpayer, for them to be working. But that seems to be a crime on the other side, to ask somebody to work that can work.’

Not all Republicans were aligned in their passion to pass Trump’s bill.

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., torched the legislative behemoth in a fiery floor speech that railed against the deficit-adding effect the bill would have. He and Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., both voted against advancing the bill through a key procedural hurdle late Saturday night.

Tillis, who largely agrees with many of the tweaks to Medicaid, railed against the changes to the provider tax rate and accused the president of being duped by his healthcare advisors in the White House. 

He said he would remain against the bill until lawmakers took the time to actually unpack what their Medicaid proposals would do to the states, adding, ‘What’s wrong with actually understanding what this bill does?’ 

‘Republicans are about to make a mistake on healthcare and betraying a promise,’ he warned. ‘What do I tell 663,000 people in two or three years, when President Trump breaks his promise by pushing them off of Medicaid because the funding isn’t there anymore?’

Paul, who has taken issue with the addition of a $5 trillion hike to the debt ceiling baked into the bill, reaffirmed that he would be voting against the megabill during final passage.

‘In deciding whether to vote for the ‘big, not-so-beautiful bill,’ I’ve asked a very specific question: Will the deficit be more or less next year? The answer, without question, is this bill will grow the deficit,’ he said. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS
previous post
Exiled Iranian prince tells Trump he can be ‘one of history’s great peacemakers’ amid talk of regime change
next post
Tillis denounces Trump ‘big, beautiful bill’ hours after surprise retirement announcement

Related Posts

Jeffrey Epstein case reopens focus on Ghislaine Maxwell...

July 22, 2025

Huckabee hits back at Western countries that ‘side’...

July 22, 2025

Obama denies Trump’s ‘bizarre allegations’ that he was...

July 22, 2025

‘Not going away’: Inside the Epstein drama that’s...

July 22, 2025

GOP lawmakers advocate for US condemnation of persecution...

July 22, 2025

Dems seek retaliation over GOP cuts as Thune...

July 22, 2025

SCOOP: Dem fundraising giant ActBlue hit with subpoena...

July 22, 2025

Trump calls for Obama to be criminally investigated,...

July 22, 2025

Salvadoran president responds to Hunter Biden’s invasion threat:...

July 22, 2025

China denies wrongdoing in preventing dozens of Americans...

July 22, 2025

    Fill Out & Get More Relevant News


    Stay ahead of the market and unlock exclusive trading insights & timely news. We value your privacy - your information is secure, and you can unsubscribe anytime. Gain an edge with hand-picked trading opportunities, stay informed with market-moving updates, and learn from expert tips & strategies.

    Recent Posts

    • 10 Biggest Cannabis Stocks in the US and Canada

      July 23, 2025
    • Sarama Resources Completes Mt Venn Gold Project Acquisition

      July 23, 2025
    • Heritage Announces LIFE Offering and Provides Corporate and Exploration Update

      July 23, 2025
    • JZR Gold Announces Closing Of Non-Brokered Private Placement Offering Of Units For $1,800,000

      July 23, 2025
    • 5 Best-performing Copper Stocks on the TSX in 2025

      July 22, 2025

    Archives

    • July 2025 (572)
    • June 2025 (398)
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Copyright © 2025 incomeresearchers.com | All Rights Reserved

    Income Researchers
    • Editor’s Pick
    • Investing
    • Economy
    • Stock
    • Politics

    Read alsox

    Venezuelan opposition member details harrowing 400-day captivity at...

    June 27, 2025

    Moderate House Dem Jared Golden says Trump was...

    June 23, 2025

    Trump had very unexpected convo with Obama at...

    July 10, 2025