Senators Worry About Spending in Trump’s ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’
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Senators Worry About Spending in Trump’s ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’
(The Center Square) – Republicans’ behemoth budget reconciliation bill still faces major hurdles after passing the U.S. House last week, with multiple senators raising concerns about the legislation’s cost.
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The One Big Beautiful Bill Act in its current form hikes the debt ceiling by $4 trillion and funds large swaths of Trump’s tax, border, energy, and defense agenda, including codifying President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cuts. The legislation consists of 11 separate House committee prints that collectively fulfill the April budget resolution’s 10-year spending and savings instructions.
That budget blueprint allowed House committees to budget $4.5 trillion in lost revenue over the next decade, provided they also find $2 trillion in cuts and assume $2.6 trillion in economic growth.
Since House committees found only $1.5 trillion in cuts – including to entitlement programs like Medicaid – the bill authorizes $4 trillion in spending. But organizations like the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget say the true cost of the bill could amount to a $5.2 trillion federal debt increase.
House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., barely garnered enough Republican votes to advance the bill through his chamber after partially fulfilling demands from multiple GOP factions, including fiscal hawks.
But the delicate balance may not survive if Senate leaders make the controversial changes they want – such as raising the debt ceiling by $5 trillion and undoing the House’s Inflation Reduction Act funding clawbacks – and enough Republican senators already oppose the bill in its existing form to tank it once it reaches the upper chamber.
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said he’s “a no” on the bill “[until] everyone in Washington gets serious about paying down our national debt,” which is set to surpass $37 trillion in 2025.
“Republicans promised Americans we would rein in wasteful spending and tackle the national debt if they gave us control of all three branches of government,” Paul said in a recent X post. “Instead, my colleagues want to tack on more to our national debt instead of making necessary cuts.”
But the Senate’s purported plans will likely skyrocket the cost of the already expensive bill, due to the budget blueprint also allowing Senate committees to spend up to $1.5 trillion on their own policy wishes.
For while House committees operated under the current law baseline, which assumes that extending the tax cuts would result in trillions of lost federal revenue – hence their work to find $1.5 trillion in cuts – the Senate decided to adopt a current policy baseline when calculating their costs.
The controversial accounting tactic, which critics call a “gimmick,” treats the tax cut extension as a continuation of current law rather than new policy, theoretically zeroing out the cost of permanently codifying the TCJA.
Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., called the bill’s trajectory “mortgaging our children’s future” in multiple social media posts and comments to reporters.
“Republican leaders have repeatedly said, ‘we don’t have a revenue problem, we have a spending problem,’ Johnson said on X. “I believe there are enough Republican Senators to force them to live up to their rhetoric.”
The Senate is also looking at raising the debt ceiling by $5 trillion rather than $4 trillion, to which Paul has vehemently objected, telling reporters that “there’s nothing fiscally conservative about expanding the debt ceiling more than we’ve ever done it before.”
Because the budget reconciliation process bypasses the Senate filibuster, the upper chamber could pass the final package by a simple majority vote. But if just two more senators join Rand and Johnson in voting against the megabill, Trump’s entire policy agenda could fall apart.
What do you think of the big, beautiful bill? Share your thoughts and prayers below.
This article was originally published at The Center Square. Photo Credit: Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America – Ron Johnson, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=94252805 and Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of America – Rand Paul, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=44808097.
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Comments
Father, we ask You to give our senators wisdom as they debate the big, beautiful bill. Help them to craft legislation that supports the President’s agenda and saves money for America taxpayers!
President Trump’s a businessman. I trust his understanding of money, economy and sense. I don’t understand the big beautiful bill, but if the President believes it best, I say go for it.
Quite right Daniel, debt rose in Trump’s first term and this raises it further. It provides tax relief for the rich and reduces support for the poor and sick – so all in all a good Christian approach. What sort of businessman goes bankrupt six times – a Trump.
Blessings.
FATHER, Thank YOU for BBB. Open the eyes of the holdout Senators. Alternative is suicide! Trillions of increase tax’s for American’s is unreasonable to ask… holding up Trump’s turning around Biden’s destruction of America.
We cry JUSTICE JUSTICE IN YESHUA’S HOLY NAME AMEN AMEN
I’m OK with saving $2 Trillion instead of $1.5 Trillion. Most importantly, the Senate must eliminate 85% of USAID. While I’m in favor of eliminating tax on tips, I’m not in favor of eliminating tax on overtime pay. Also, the Senate must reinstate eliminating tax in Social Security income.
DEAR LORD GOD
PLEEASELET TRUMP’SBIG BEAUTIFUL BILL BE EVERYTHING THAT TRUMPWANTS ITTO B.THAT IT FULFILLS A DEEP NEED IN AMERICA AND HIGHLIGHTS A RETURN TO A CLASSIC CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT
I ASK IN JESUS’NAME
AMEN
There us more than spending involved. I pray that each Senator become aware of all the issues, and not let only one prevail. I pray that each Senator carefully consider ALL the issues, and mark up the bill accordingly. May God’s will be done, not just any politician’s.
As I said before, no “big” legislation is beautiful to me. I’m thankful that I don’t have to make these decisions, it is way above my ability to comprehend and balance the options. But I am also thankful for those elected officials who are entrusted to do so. I pray that You will help them, Lord, to find a way to navigate these uncharted waters – do they have an example of any administration that has cut the federal budget? (That is a serious question!) Please have mercy on our nation, Lord, or we will not thrive.
If it does not stop the over spending and lower the debt ceiling, it is the wrong bill to pass. We can and must do better, and now is the time. Tomorrow will be too late.
There is nothing “beautiful” about this monstrosity! Fully funding USAID, for openers, while using bloated 2020 plandemic spending as the baseline? We are headed for an economic collapse (worldwide) when the bond markets eventually, inevitably reject our Treasuries. Cloward-Pivin and Saul Alinsky strategists (Hilary Clinton anyone?) will have achieved their fait accompli.
Please pray for our beloved President Donald J Trump as his Great Big Beautiful Bill is modified by the Senate to reduce spending, and not increase the deficit by several TRILLION DOLLARS.
President Trump ran on balancing the budget, but it appears that he is doing the exact opposite with his Big Bill. We want truth and integrity, and honesty in our elected officials; People who you can trust to do the right thing. If the Senate can reduce spending by 4 Trillion the House should pass it without delay, and the nation will tighten it’s belt until the economy roars back like a lion.
As Elon Musk separates from the Trump Administration over this Big Bloated Spending Bill, we all wish him well and success as he returns to his own work.
All for now. Amen.
Art Wilmoth
The politicians need to get off the greed wagon and get on board with the Bill.