“This is one big ugly bill House Republican On the house floor at 6:09am Thursday on the house floor, he is trying to cram the throats of Americans under the cover of darkness, under Houkeem Jeffries, the minority leader of DN.Y.
You cannot go far from the truth. The sun was rising.
“Why are we here at 3am, tracking this bill quickly?” Thursday at 3:15am, Rep. Becca Balint, D-Vt. asked.
GOP Hold-Out Sound Alarm as Trump’s “Big, Beautiful Bill” passes the house vote

The US Capitol is lit up by the morning sun. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc.)
The House of Representatives discussed the package well past Witch’s time on Thursday, but lawmakers approved the bill just before the end of dawn.
House Republican Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris, R-Md. They narrowed their victory 215-214.
There weren’t many sessions all night long In the council recently. Especially when moving laws of his size outside of business hours – coated with high drama and towering political interests. However, it is not surprising that recently, the house had to burn midnight oil on three different occasions to complete the packaging. This is typical of large laws with exponential results. It doesn’t matter what political party or issue is. Covid-19 money. Obamacare. Infrastructure Act. Inflation reduction methods. You give it a name. Congress works 24 hours a day when they are on a cliff to do something big.
House GOP leadership wins a victory lap after handing over Trump’s “one big, beautiful bill”

Left House Speaker Mike Johnson delivered a “big, beautiful bill” to the House with a narrow margin, which could finally end up at President Donald Trump’s desk in the face of Senate fights. (AP/Getty)
Whether that’s good or not is another question.
The week began with a Sunday night meeting of the House Budget Committee at 10:26pm. The House Rules Committee made the Budget Committee one better at 1am Wednesday. The session lasted nearly 22 hours and ended late Wednesday night. The House then began floor action on the bill early Thursday. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La. closed the bill’s vote just before 7am.
Talking about Congress is usually enough to put people to sleep, but with time like this, if you snooze, you lose.
Rip Van Winkle, ER, and Rep. Andrew Garbarino, Rn.Y. accidentally caught some Zzz early at exactly the wrong time. Johnson said Garvalino fell asleep behind the room in his house while voting on a “big, beautiful bill.”

House of Representatives. (Chip Somode Villa)
Gerbarino and other Imperial Republicans lost their sleep for several weeks as they fought for a deal with salt. They wanted a higher deduction on state and local taxes in exchange for assistance with the bill. The problem with the sleeper, this wasn’t the case. The new agreement was paramount to passing the bill. Still, Gerbarino wasn’t satisfied with the compromise.
Perhaps it will change In the Senate.
Garbarino can dream.
If you heard the blistering noise on the north side of the US Capitol on Thursday, it was awakening from the slumber of Senate legislatives. The Senate focuses on most of the president Donald TrumpHis term was to check his cabinet. The law does not control floor traffic in the Senate this year, but that will change soon.
“Our team is appealing to discussions with the Senate side of Capitol Hill,” he said. White House Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt.

White House Press Secretary Caroline Lewitt will hold a press conference at the White House in Washington, DC on April 15, 2025. (Reuters/Evelyn Hockstein)
However, the department has already emerged.
R-Wis. Senator Ron Johnson of the house packages.
“I’ve already said that in that current state, it’s completely unacceptable to me,” Johnson said. “I’ll vote no.”
President Trump hopes the Senate will complete the measure and deposit it at his desk by July 4th, but Wisconsin Republicans have quized across the demand for this version of Trump’s bill.
“If he was upset, I didn’t really care,” Johnson said.

Sen. Ron Johnson, a Republican from Wisconsin, has campaigned and supported President Donald Trump for a great deal, but is extremely critical of the president’s “big beautiful bill” heading for the Senate. (Jim Vondruska/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Other Republican senators have tried to give President Trump some respect.
But that’s all.
“He’s the band’s leader and he’s one of a good leader,” said Sen. Jim Justice of RW.VA. “But with that being said, they’re going to say they don’t want to hurry up just to meet the deadline and everything. We want to make it right.”
Sen. Tom Tillis (RN.C.) considered July 4th to be a “optimistic” deadline.

Sen. Tom Tillis was critical of President Donald Trump’s second term and policy proposals. (Getty Images)
“Look at how long it took the house to reach this point,” Tillis said. “There are still many decisions to be made, so I think we’re talking about weeks or months.”
And the Senate will inevitably change its measures.
“The Senate wants to put its own stamp on this. We’ll write our own version of the bill,” said Sen. Josh Hawley of R-Mo.
The senators have already made their demands.
“I’m not voting to raise the debt cap of $5 trillion because I’m financially unacceptable and not conservative,” Senator R-Ky said.

Senator Rand Paul, R-Ky, leaning towards libertarians. , the left, who primarily supports President Donald Trump, has taken away several areas of disagreement, including spending. (Left: Samuel Colm/Getty Images; Right: Aaron Schwartz/CNP/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Trimming deficits that are worried about other senators.
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham, Rs.C.
What gets caught up in the bill depends on the lonely factor.
“We need to get 51 votes,” Tillis said.
Senate Democrats I’m also thinking about No. 51, in the context of 2026. Democrats believe the bill will help win 51 Senate seats in the medium term.
“The chances of the House regaining the Senate based on what we passed,” Senate minority leader said. Chuck Schumer,dn.y.

Senator Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leader of the Senate, sees the “big, beautiful bill” as the key rally point that will turn mid-term voters into Republicans in 2026. (Reuters/Amanda Andrade Laud/File Photo)
House Democrats believe that early morning roll-call voting will be an ingenious vote held in this Congress.
“This may be very good that this day is the day when Republicans lose control of the U.S. House of Representatives,” Jeffries said.
It’s not a news flash. The parties have customarily focused on a small number of votes where each organization takes over the course of the two-year parliament. They deploy the outcome of those votes against the enemy. Look at the small script at the bottom of the TV screen when Midterms ads begin running in September and October next year. You can bet that Democrats will document the votes that were closed at dawn on Thursday.
Additionally, Republicans hide all their political eggs in one basket. Most of President Trump’s agenda is pushed into this singular scale, for better or worse. Lawmakers must provide funding to the government later this year. And next year too. But it is unclear if Republicans have other laws that compete with the width of the bill since then.
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Jeffries allegedly tried to advance the bill “in the darkness.” That’s not accurate. Democrats and Republicans work to make sure voters know everything about the bill. The political consequences of this law are too important.
Beauty is in the eyes of the viewer. And voters decide how “beautiful” this big bill is.