Trump tax bill clears the House in a victory for Republicans, advances to the Senate

Trump tax bill clears the House in a victory for Republicans, advances to the Senate


House advances President Trump's tax & spending bill

WASHINGTON — Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives came together early Thursday to pass President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful” tax bill out of the chamber on a narrow vote.

Every Democrat on the floor voted no, as did Republican Reps. Warren Davidson of Ohio and Thomas Massie of Kentucky. Rep. Andy Harris, R-Md., who chairs the conservative House Freedom Caucus, voted present. The final vote tally was 215-214.

The passage was a major victory for Republican leaders, who spent the past two months crafting the bill and the past two days making last-minute changes to it. 

The more than 1,000 pages of legislation and 42 pages of amendments are a case study in how to win over both moderates and hardline conservatives.

The House Rules Committee convened for 21 straight hours of debate and amendments in order to meet Speaker Mike Johnson’s self-imposed Memorial Day deadline for passing the bill.

The package, comprised of tax cuts paired with cuts to the social safety net, still faces a complicated path through the Senate. 

The upper chamber will consider the legislation under a set of rules called budget reconciliation, which requires only a simple majority to pass instead of the typical 60 votes required to move bills through the Senate.

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“To our friends in the Senate, I would just say, the president is waiting with his pen,” Johnson said from the House floor ahead of the vote.

He re-iterated that he aims to get the package delivered to President Donald Trump’s desk by July 4. “Today proves that we can do that and we will do that,” he said.

Nonetheless, several Republican senators have already said they will require significant changes to the bill before agreeing to vote for it. 

The final version of the bill that passed Thursday contained scores of amendments, designed to give each of the competing factions within the party a win.

For example, a timeline for imposing work requirements for Medicaid recipients was moved up by two years, to the end of 2026 — a victory for conservatives.

But the amendments also contained a four-fold increase in the so-called SALT deduction cap, from a current maximum of $10,000 in allowable deductions for state and local taxes paid, up to $40,000, for taxpayers reporting less than $500,000 in income.

The broader bill seeks to deliver on Trump’s key campaign promises, and includes provisions to make permanent Trump’s 2017 tax cuts and eliminate taxes on tips.

Yet a new analysis from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates that under the bill, “in general, resources would decrease for households in the lowest decile (tenth) of the income distribution, whereas resources would increase for households in the highest decile.”

Markets tumbled Wednesday on concerns that Trump’s spending bill will lead to exploding federal deficits and weaker long-term fiscal health for the nation. The yield on the 30-year Treasury bond yield hit 5.09%.

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