House to Vote on Senate Version of Trump's Bill Amid GOP Division
- The U.S. Senate passed President Trump's nearly 1,000-page tax and spending bill in a 51-50 vote on Tuesday in Washington, D.C., with Vice President J.D. Vance breaking the tie.
- This Senate bill follows a May House version but differs by including cuts to Medicaid and programs like food stamps, causing division among House Republicans ahead of a required final House vote.
- The legislation aims to cut taxes for working Americans, fuel economic growth, preserve benefits, boost military spending, and eliminate some green energy subsidies while adding work requirements for Medicaid recipients.
- Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer condemned the bill, emphasizing that those who lose their health coverage or face job losses in clean energy sectors do not view it positively, while President Trump praised the legislation as a comprehensive package with benefits for everyone.
- The bill now returns to the House, where Republican leadership vows swift approval before July 4 despite warnings of opposition from some GOP members concerned about spending and Medicaid cuts.
193 Articles
193 Articles
The approval of the U.S. President Donald Trump's grand fiscal and budgetary plan, which contemplates tax cuts and cuts in public spending, stalled Wednesday night due to opposition from some Republican congressmen.At least five Trump Party legislators voted, along with the entire Democratic bench, against bringing the budget to debate and vote in plenary, and others have not yet cast their vote, so that the process of the project remains, pro n…

US House close to final vote on Trump tax bill
US lawmakers teed up a final vote on Donald Trump's marquee tax and spending bill for Thursday morning after bruising Republican infighting nearly derailed the centerpiece of the president's domestic agenda.
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