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House conservative fiscal hawks warn the president Donald Trump’s After the Senate makes important changes to legislation, the “big, beautiful bill” could fall into serious trouble.
“There’s a real problem with that,” Rep. Ralph Norman, Rs.C., told Fox News Digital on Tuesday. “We’re on the president, but we’re worried about change.”
He and other members of the Right-wing House Freedom Caucus have been particularly furious by the Senate’s decision to postpone the expiration of certain green energy tax credits from the previous Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).
They are also wary of additional dollars being spent on increasing debt restrictions. This has been directed Trump to do this over the summer before the US runs out of cash.
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Rep. Chip Roy is one of the Republicans who are rebelling against the current version of Senate Majority Leader John Tune’s settlement bill. (Getty Images)
Senate bill versions increase The US debt limit is $5 trillionwhile the previous house versions hiked for $4 trillion.
Congressional Republicans are working to pass Trump’s agenda on tax, immigration, defense and energy in one large bill through the budget settlement process.
By lowering the Senate’s passing threshold to 51 votes, the settlement allows political parties to pass the wiped laws, provided that measures involving minorities (in this case, Democrats) fall under strict budgetary rules.
The House passed its own version of the bill later last month with just one vote. House speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) cited his razor-like majority, begging his Senate counterpart to change as much as possible.
But Senate majority leader John Tune (Rs.D.) is also working on a small Republican minority. His Chamber of Commerce products have made several important updates to please the GOP meeting.
“The changes we’re hearing are not good, and Mike Johnson told the Senate: “Don’t send back a revised bill, a significantly revised bill. Don’t send back a significantly revised bill because you passed the house with one vote margin,” Rep. R-Texas told Fox News Digital.
Andy Harris, R-Md, Chair of House Freedom Caucus. told Fox News Digital that if Senate products were returned in their current form, they voted against the bill, but did not discuss further changes to lawmakers.
Harris voted “now” for the bill when it passed the House in May, telling reporters he didn’t vote “no” while lingering concerns to keep Trump’s agenda moving.

House Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris said he would not vote straight away for the Senate version. (Getty Images)
“One big beautiful bill in the Senate version currently proposed will weaken the priorities of major homes. It’s not enough to eliminate Medicaid waste, fraud and abuse. It goes back to the back of the elimination of the new green fraud included in the House bill, and significantly increases the deficit.
“If the Senate tried to jam the house with this version, I wouldn’t vote for ‘present’. I’ll vote. ”
R-Mo. Rep. Eric Burlison similarly said in a statement that if he returns home in his current form he would oppose the bill. Missouri Republican voted to move the bill forward in May.
Rep. Mark Harris, Freshman House Freedom Caucus, also voted for the House version of the bill, but said, “I’m more worried every day with so many moving works and rumors about how one big beautiful bill in the Senate is being formed!”
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Rep. Chip Roy of R-Texas, policy chair for Freedom Caucus, wrote X:
Republican leaders have set a goal of getting the bill at Trump’s desk by July 4th.
president Ordered Republicans in Congress Stay in Washington until the law passes in Tuesday’s long, truthful social post.
“To a friend in the Senate, lock him in his room if necessary. Don’t go home and close the deal this week,” Trump wrote. “We’ll work with the house so they can pick it up and hand it straight away and give it straight away. No one’s going on vacation until it’s done.”

Trump wants Republicans to work throughout the planned break period. (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)
While right-wing conservatives oppose the bill, other moderate Republican facts in the House have called for changes to state and local tax (salt) credits and Medicaid Senate revisions, adjusting in particular provider tax rates.
The issue of compound interest for House Republicans is a massive cost-cutting clause that was excluded by Senators during a process known as the “birdbus,” which tests whether items in the bill must directly address settlement rules that govern settlement rules to the effects of budgets and spending.
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham, Rs.C. laughed at the House GOP threat.
Republicans challenge the “unrelated” Budget Office when criticizing Trump’s “beautiful bill”
“What I tell them, ‘We’ll do better than you did,'” he said.
Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) told Fox News Digital that a bill of the size Republicans were about to pass would be difficult to build a full consensus. He pointed to particularly complications with tax negotiations as Republicans worked to extend Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Employment Act (TCJA).
“Follow your mind. Take your brain with you,” Kennedy said. “Don’t impose the biggest tax hike of history on the American people. Looking at it, there’s no denying that no one is completely happy. I’m not completely satisfied with where we are and we’re not there yet. We’re making progress.”
Senator Kevin Cramer, Rn.D., when asked what he thought about the conservatives who had dropped the bill. said, “Everyone has to slap their chest a little, they have to bet on their ground.”
“But at the end of the day, if [Roy] “The vote against permanent Trump tax cuts and economic growth, and critical and serious reforms on IRA credits, Medicaid reforms, is not sure how he lives with his conscience and the vote “no,” he said.

Sen. Lindsey Graham told House Republicans, “I’ll do better than you did.” (Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)
However, it is not clear whether Senate Republicans are united in the bill itself. Thune admitted that if the bill was placed on the floor, there could be asylum. He can afford to lose three votes.
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“We have a lot of very independent senators who have reasons and things to be strong on this bill,” he said.
Johnson downplayed the difference between the two rooms at his regular press conference Tuesday.
“It’s a very different product and I don’t think we can say we’re ahead of it yet. We’re still waiting for the final details. We’ve given the Senate the space for them to work another room,” Johnson said. “I’ve been stressing this from the start that this is a one-team approach. Republicans in the House and Senate work together with the White House. There’s no sunlight and ultimate goals and objective between us.”