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Senate Republicans are approaching their final vote for the president Donald Trump’s The “big and beautiful bill” faces another obstacle before documenting the ambitious agenda of lawmakers.
Lawmakers concluded a few hours of discussion about the megaville, which began on Sunday afternoon and left Peter early Monday morning. The next hurdle is the marathon “voting,” in which lawmakers on either side of the aisle can submit unlimited number of amendments to the bill.
DEM delay tactics end, and debate begins with Trump’s “big and beautiful bill.”

President Donald Trump will speak to the media before he puts Marine on the South Lawn of the White House on June 15th, 2025. (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)
Senate Republican This time will be used to change the bill further and pass it, but Democrats will inflict as much pain as possible and burn as much time as possible with amendments designed to kneel or kill the law completely.
The argument was a predictable partisan event filled with largely floor charts, a fist gestured intently gestures, and a plea to pass or bring the bill to the heart.
Senate Democrats He opposed the bill, particularly on Medicaid, Green Energy Tax subsidies, and particularly on how its design would be changed to make Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Employment Act permanent.

Senate majority leader John Tune will talk to reporters about President Donald Trump’s spending and tax bill promotion on Capitol on June 2, 2025. (AP Photo/j. Scott Apple White)
Republicans praised the “big and beautiful bill” for how important it is to prevent domestic growth, particularly the president’s first term tax cuts.
“I tell everyone in America about what we are doing here, hearing all the politics of fear and driving the deficit. [they] Only in Washington, D.C., Chairman Mike Krapo, chairman of the R-Idaho Senate Finance Committee, has refused to raise taxes, saying, “And we won’t let that happen.”
The lawmakers are Lindsey Graham, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, Rs.C. , or began debate round-trip over whether the senator had the authority to decide whether the current policy baseline could be used.
“Republicans can use budgetary gimmicks that want to get mathematics to work on paper, but they can’t write about the actual outcomes of adding tens of trillions to their debt,” the Senate Minority Leader said. Chuck Schumer,dn.y.
Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” faces Republican family feud as the Senate reveals the final text

Senator Rand Paul and President Donald Trump (Getty Images)
The Non-Participation Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released two sets of scores, Saturday and Sunday, reflecting both current policy and current legislation. Under current policy, the bill will just exceed $570 billion over the next decade. However, under current law, the package adds around $3.3 trillion.
Graham retorted that as budget chair, he has the right to set numbers.
“The resolution we run to take you here is that we vote to make it, so we’re not doing anything mean,” he said. “We actually voted to give me the authority to do this and it passed.”
Graham also went to BAT for the GOP-planned cuts to Medicaid. They presented it as an effort to eradicate waste, fraud and abuse in the program by instilling work requirements, banishing illegal immigrants from the benefits role and changing the extent to which the federal government pays.
National Debt Tracker: American Taxpayer (you) is on the hook at 36,215,806,064,740.36 as of 6/27/25
He claimed that he had been the first since the previous president. Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Acts have become law, and Medicaid has grown exponentially. This is because Obama “incentivized” states that “encouraged” the Medicaid expansion program, allowing healthy working-age adults to reach the benefits roll.
“It’s good that the people involved are working,” he said. “For taxpayers, it’s good that they’re working, but it’s like a crime on the other side, asking them to work so they can do their job.”
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Not all Republicans are in line with their passion to pass Trump’s bill.
Senator Land Poler-ky. torched the legislative giant with a fiery floor speech that violated the bill’s deficit compensation effect. He and Senator Tom Tillis, RN.C. voted against moving forward the bill through important procedural hurdles late Saturday night.
Tillis, who largely agrees to many of the tweaks to Medicaid, opposed the change in the tax rates of providers and accused the president of being fooled by a White House medical advisor.
He said lawmakers will take the time to actually solve what the Medicaid proposal does for states, adding, “What’s wrong with actually understanding this bill?”
“Republicans are trying to make mistakes about betraying health care and promises,” he warned. “The funds aren’t there anymore, so what will you tell 663,000 people in a couple of years when President Trump pushes them away from Medicaid and breaks his promise?”
Paul, who had been troubled by adding a $5 trillion increase to the debt cap burned into the bill, has reaffirmed that he will vote against Megaville during the final passage.
“I asked a very specific question when deciding whether to vote for the ‘big and so beautiful bill’. Will the deficit be more or less next year? Without a doubt, this bill will increase the deficit,” he said.