Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ hangs in balance as three Republicans defect

The Senate Republicans present themselves to adopt a budgetary bill which is essential on the agenda of President Donald Trump before a self-imposed deadline of July 4.
The leadership of the parties twisted arms for a first vote on the “Big Beautiful Bill” on Saturday, after the release of its latest version – every 940 pages – shortly after midnight.
Basic Republicans were divided on the quantity to be cut from social protection programs to cover the cost of extending some 3.8 TN (2.8 TN £) in Trump tax lightening.
The sprawling taxation and the expenditure measure adopted the House of Representatives by a single vote last month.
In a memo sent to the Senate offices on Saturday, the White House approved the last bill revisions and called for its adoption.
The memo would have warned that not approving the budget “would be the ultimate betrayal”.
But the head of the majority of the Senate, John Thune, called the plans for an “ambitious” Saturday vote.
A Wisconsin republican senator, Ron Johnson, told Fox & Friends on Saturday that he would vote “no”, saying he still needed time to read it.
“We have just received the bill,” said Johnson. “I got my first copy around 01:23 in the morning.”
Two other Republican senators stand.
Thom Tillis de Caroline du Nord raised objections to legislation on Saturday, one day after Rand Paul de Kentucky said no.
All eyes are now on centrist republican senators Lisa Murkowski from Alaska and Susan Collins from Maine.
Collins said that it could support a vote to advance the bill in the debate phase, but that it remains undecided on the question of whether it will vote “yes” to adopt it.
The bill needs a simple majority to clean the Senate. Republicans holding 53 seats out of 100, plus a break in equality by vice-president JD Vance, the party can only afford three defections.
The latest version has been designed to appease certain republican traits of the back-ban.
Other amendments incorporate the comments of the Senate parliamentarian, an official who examines the bills to ensure that they comply with the procedures of the Chamber.
It includes an increase in the financing of rural hospitals, after some moderate parties argued that the initial proposal would harm their voters.
Another adjustment was provided to the taxes of states and premises (salt) – a contention apple for representatives of high tax states such as New York.
There is currently a $ 10,000 ceiling on the amount of taxpayers who can deduct from the amount they owe in federal taxes.
In the new bill, the Senate Republicans increased the salt limit to $ 40,000 for couples married to income up to $ 500,000 – in accordance with what the House of Representatives has approved.
But the latest version of the Senate ends the ceiling of $ 40,000 after five years – while it would be $ 10,000.
There are also changes to the additional nutrition aid program (SNAP), which offers food advantages to low -income Americans.
Under the last bill, Alaska and Hawaii would temporarily be exempt from an obligation proposal for certain States to begin to place the bill of the program, which is currently entirely funded by the federal government.
The revision comes after the two Republican senators in Alaska have put pressure on an exemption.
The legislation still contains some of its main components, in particular the extension of the tax reductions adopted by the Republicans in 2017, as well as the addition of new reductions on which Trump campaigned, such as a tax deduction on social security benefits and the elimination of taxes on work and extension councils.
More controversial measures are also in place, including restrictions and requirements on Medicaid – a health care program used by millions of older, disabled and low -income Americans.
Democrats have strongly criticized this bill, saying that it will limit access to affordable health care for millions of Americans.
The Congressional Budget Office estimates that 7.8 million people would not be insured due to these Medicaid cuts.
Senator Patty Murray, a Washington State Democrat, went to social networks on Saturday to say that the bill contains “the biggest health care cuts in history”.