Senate holds marathon vote series on Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” as GOP eyes July 4 deadline
The limitless modification vote sequence on the Senate model of the Trump tax, border and protection invoice started round 9 a.m. ET Monday and has continued all through the day and late into the night.By late Monday evening, consequential amendments, together with one by GOP Sen. Rick Scott that may make vital cuts to Medicaid, …
The limitless modification vote sequence on the Senate model of the Trump tax, border and protection invoice started round 9 a.m. ET Monday and has continued all through the day and late into the night.
By late Monday evening, consequential amendments, together with one by GOP Sen. Rick Scott that may make vital cuts to Medicaid, nonetheless had not obtained a vote.
GOP Senate Majority Chief John Thune remained assured the Senate might nonetheless vote on closing passage of the Trump tax invoice in a single day.
Washington — A marathon vote sequence is underway within the Senate on President Trump’s large tax invoice as Republicans work to move the centerpiece laws of Mr. Trump’s second-term agenda.
The Home narrowly handed the invoice final month, and Senate Republicans have been working to place their mark on the laws, treading fastidiously in order to not throw off the fragile steadiness within the decrease chamber. The Home might want to approve the Senate’s adjustments to the invoice earlier than it could possibly head to the president’s desk for his signature. And lawmakers try to maneuver shortly, with a self-imposed July 4 deadline to get the measure signed.
The Senate labored via the weekend because the GOP nears a closing dash on the laws forward of the deadline. Titled “One Huge, Stunning Invoice,” the laws consists of elevated spending for border safety, protection and power manufacturing, which is offset partly by cuts to healthcare and vitamin applications. The Congressional Funds Workplace estimated Sunday that the laws would enhance the deficit by practically $3.3 trillion over the following decade.
Senate Republicans superior the laws late Saturday, with all however two voting in favor following hours of delay because the GOP labored to iron out last-minute particulars and dispel concern amongst holdouts. The vote on the movement to proceed stayed open for greater than three hours as holdouts sought assurances from GOP leaders. Some tweaks had been made to the invoice earlier than Republicans finally obtained sufficient votes to maneuver ahead.
Senate Majority Chief John Thune (R-SD) walks in Capitol Hill, as Republican lawmakers battle to move President Donald Trump’s sweeping spending and tax invoice, in Washington, D.C., June 30, 2025.
Elizabeth Frantz / REUTERS
Senate Democrats additional delayed the laws’s path ahead by forcing the invoice to be learn in its entirety, beginning late Saturday. After practically 16 hours, the Senate clerks concluded their studying of the invoice on the ground, beginning the clock on debate. Either side then had as much as 10 hours for debate, earlier than voting kicked off Monday morning.
The “vote-a-rama”
Following debate, and a break till the morning, the Senate started what’s generally known as a “vote-a-rama” Monday during which senators might provide a vast variety of amendments and pressure the chamber to forged vote after vote. Democrats have been utilizing the chance to place their GOP colleagues on the file on a variety of controversial points forward of the midterm elections.
However earlier than the chamber might get to the modification votes, senators needed to deal with an excellent disagreement over the present coverage baseline, an accounting method that may make it seem that extending the present tax coverage would price nothing. Senate Majority Chief John Thune maneuvered Sunday to permit using the present coverage baseline, earlier than Senate Minority Chief Chuck Schumer shortly appealed the transfer, requesting a vote as Democrats railed in opposition to it because the “nuclear choice.” The chamber voted 53-47, alongside get together traces, to affirm using the present coverage baseline on Monday.
Schumer mentioned that Democrats would convey “one modification after the opposite” Monday, and commenced the method by providing an modification to ship the invoice again to the Finance Committee to revisit a few of its well being care provisions. The chamber voted down the modification in a party-line vote.
Democrats proposed a variety of amendments to aim to roll again a number of the invoice’s extra controversial provisions. Sen. Ed Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat, proposed an modification to take away the invoice’s provisions that he mentioned would pressure rural hospitals to restrict their companies or shut their doorways. And Sen. Chris Coons, a Delaware Democrat, proposed an modification to remove what he known as “crimson tape” round Medicaid eligibility. Different amendments proposed by Democrats involved cuts to meals help and state supplier taxes, amongst a variety of associated points. The amendments fell quick.
GOP Sen. John Cornyn of Texas provided the primary Republican-led modification, which might have decreased federal Medicaid enlargement funds to states that present protection to undocumented immigrants charged with particular crimes. The Senate’s rulemaker, generally known as the parliamentarian, decided that the supply would require a 60-vote threshold. The modification fell quick, although it picked up help from a handful of Democrats.
Amid the slew of votes, anticipation swirled round a consequential modification anticipated to be put ahead by GOP Sen. Rick Scott of Florida later Monday. The modification would considerably cut back the federal Medicaid enlargement match made beneath the Inexpensive Care Act, barring new enrollees after 2030, in a transfer that may make the invoice extra palatable to some fiscal hawks.
Thune has backed the modification, calling it “nice coverage,” and forecasted that it’s going to get vital help among the many Senate GOP. However whether or not it has sufficient help to be added to the invoice stays to be seen.
The chamber’s tempo started to gradual Monday night. Because the modification votes dragged on, Democrats accused Republicans of stalling.
“They’re delaying, they’re stalling, they’re chopping a whole lot of back-room offers,” Schumer instructed reporters. “However we’re simply pushing ahead, modification after modification — they do not like these amendments.”
Requested by reporters in regards to the holdup Monday evening, Thune mentioned, “we’re simply form of determining what everyone has to have when it comes to votes.” He added that Senate GOP leaders are working to assemble a listing, and expressed confidence that the chamber might nonetheless vote on closing passage in a single day.
The trail to passage
Senate Republicans have been pursuing the laws via the finances reconciliation course of, which allows the get together within the majority to maneuver forward with out help from throughout the aisle. With solely a easy majority required to advance the measure, somewhat than the 60-votes wanted to maneuver ahead with most laws, Senate Democrats have few mechanisms to fight the invoice’s progress.
With a 53-seat majority, Senate GOP leaders can solely afford to lose help from three Republicans — and would then nonetheless require a tie-breaking vote from Vice President JD Vance. And though a variety of senators who had expressed opposition to the measure finally determined to advance it Saturday, how they are going to vote on the measure in a closing kind stays unclear.
Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and Thom Tillis of North Carolina had been the 2 Republicans to oppose the invoice’s development Saturday, and are anticipated to oppose the laws on closing passage. Tillis, who introduced Sunday that he’s not searching for reelection, took to the Senate flooring that evening to stipulate his opposition to a number of the invoice’s cuts to Medicaid, claiming “Republicans are about to make a mistake on well being care” and arguing that the GOP is “betraying our promise.”
“It’s inescapable that this invoice in its present kind will betray the very promise that Donald J. Trump made” to focus on solely waste, fraud and abuse within the entitlement program, Tillis mentioned, claiming that the president has been “misinformed”
The North Carolina Republican argued that the July 4 deadline is an “synthetic” one, saying Senate Republicans are speeding, whereas encouraging the chamber to “take the time to get this proper” and align extra intently with the Home’s Medicaid provisions.
However Senate GOP leaders are nonetheless transferring forward. Thune, a South Dakota Republican, delivered a protection of the invoice on the Senate flooring forward of the vote-a-rama Monday, pushing again on criticism over Medicaid cuts, the influence on the deficit and using the present coverage baseline.
“Let’s vote,” Thune mentioned. “That is good for America.”
When requested whether or not he is assured Senate Republicans have the votes to move the laws, the bulk chief instructed reporters, “By no means, till we vote.”
Vance was readily available to interrupt a potential tie vote Saturday, although his vote finally wasn’t wanted. Nonetheless, the vice chairman met with GOP holdouts within the majority chief’s workplace Saturday because the White Home put stress on lawmakers to get the invoice throughout the end line.
White Home press secretary Karoline Leavitt mentioned Monday that the president has “been in contact with lawmakers all weekend lengthy to get this invoice handed.
“The White Home and the president are adamant that this invoice is handed and that this invoice makes its method to his desk,” Leavitt mentioned. “Republicans want to remain powerful and unified throughout the house stretch, and we’re relying on them to get the job executed.”
In the meantime, Sen. Mark Warner, a Virginia Democrat, warned Sunday that the laws could be a “political albatross” for Republicans, whereas suggesting that the invoice might even lose help among the many GOP, saying “it isn’t over till it is over.
I feel a lot of my Republican associates know they’re strolling the plank on this, and we’ll see if those that’ve expressed quiet consternation will even have the braveness of their conviction,” Warner mentioned Sunday on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan.”