House passes Trump’s major tax-and-spending bill, sending it to president to sign into law – live updates | US Congress

Summary

  • House Republicans passed Trump’s “one big, beautiful bill” in a 218-214 vote that was almost entirely along party lines on Thursday. The bill next goes to the president for his signature. The White House has said Trump is expected to sign the bill on Friday at 5pm EST.

  • The Democratic leader, Hakeem Jeffries, prolonged the vote with a record-setting speech in which he decried provisions in the bill that would slash social safety net programs in order to offset the cost of making Trump’s tax cuts permanent.

  • Only two House Republicans voted against the measure, for different reasons that showed the ideological span of the party’s wafer-thin majority. Kentucky congressman Thomas Massie, a libertarian-leaning fiscal hawk who has drawn Trump’s wrath for opposing his agenda, and Pennsylvania congressman Brian Fitzpatrick, who was opposed to the Medicaid cuts.

  • Democrats led by Jeffries assailed the bill as “an all-out assault on the American people”. Meanwhile, Democratic groups were vowing to hammer Republicans for their support of a bill that projections say would lead millions of Americans to lose their health insurance.

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Key events

Lauren Gambino

Lauren Gambino

Several organizations representing Latino Americans and immigrants accused House Republicans of “betraying” hard-working American families and vulnerable communities.

“This bill sends one message loud and clear — if you are Latino, working-class, or undocumented, you are not welcome here,” Juan Proaño, chief executive of LULAC, said in a statement. “It guts our nation’s moral fabric by placing walls, weapons, and fines where there should be help, hope, and humanity.”

United We Dream, an immigrant rights organization that advocates for Dreamers, warned that the provisions in the bill would have “deadly” consequences, particularly for immigrants and other vulnerable people.

“The monstrous reconciliation bill is glaring proof that the ultra-rich’s greed will stop at nothing to amass wealth and power,” the group said in a statement. “Their violent assaults on our lives as working people have delivered a bill that will leave 17 million people without healthcare, 3 million without access to food, and millions more families under threat of being abducted and disappeared by ICE. Hospitals will be forced to shut their doors and families nationwide will foot the bill of higher food prices and skyrocketing utility costs while our taxpayer dollars go to massive for-profit ICE detention camps and torture prisons abroad.”

UnidosUS chief executive Janet Murguía said House Republicans were stripping away healthcare and nutritional assistance in order to “supercharge a cruel and ineffective deportation machine that is sowing chaos across our nation”.

“Members of Congress who passed this bill have once again betrayed the trust of their constituents — including the Latino community — and chosen cruelty over common sense,” she said in a statement.

Voto Latino president Maria Teresa Kumar said her group would work to ensure voters were aware of the “harmful” bill’s impact before next year’s midterms.

“Make no mistake: we will hold lawmakers accountable where it matters most: at the ballot box,” she said. “And we will continue to inform voters, especially every Latino voter, of what they just did. Actions have consequences.”

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