Senate Republicans get ready to roll on revised budget
- Senate Republicans are advancing President Trump's tax breaks and spending cuts bill this week.
- Republicans face increasing political pressure to deliver on Trump's signature domestic policy package, extending the 2017 tax cuts.
- The House bill seeks $2 trillion in cuts to healthcare, while the Senate considers tax cuts as current policy.
- Senate Majority Leader John Thune hopes for a budget resolution this week to unlock the process, entailing a 'vote-a-rama'.
- Democrats, including Hakeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer, are preparing to oppose the GOP tax plans, calling them a 'scam'.
81 Articles
81 Articles
Senate GOP unveils new budget blueprint and braces for another vote-a-rama
Senate Republicans unveiled their new budget blueprint Wednesday afternoon, paving the way for the Senate and House to finally inch closer to advancing President Donald Trump’s immigration and tax agenda.
Senate Republicans release budget blueprint with new tax cuts and a $5 trillion debt limit hike
Senate Republicans released a new budget blueprint Wednesday that would pave the way for $1.5 trillion in new tax cuts in addition to making President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cuts permanent.
Senate Unveils Plan to Fast-Track Tax Cuts, Debt Ceiling Hike
Senate Republicans unveiled a budget blueprint designed to fast-track a renewal of President Donald Trump’s tax cuts and an increase to the nation’s borrowing limit, ahead of a planned vote on the resolution later this week.
SCOOP: Lindsey Graham amendment signals GOP budget breakthrough, sets stage for Trump agenda
Senate Budget Chairman Lindsey Graham released the Senate's proposed changes to the House-passed reconciliation resolution, signaling movement on Trump's agenda in Congress.
Senate Republicans get ready to roll on revised budget
Senate Budget Chairman Lindsey Graham unveiled the text of a compromise budget blueprint Wednesday that’s designed to pave the way for a major reconciliation package offering tax cuts, border security and defense funding and more. The measure would punt, for now, on the overall size of offsetting spending cuts, but the text clearly states a preference for a minimum $2 trillion in cuts over 10 years. Given the difficulty of achieving that hefty f…
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