Who to Watch in Senate as ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’ Advances
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Who to Watch in Senate as ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’ Advances
Republicans this week made major progress when they passed the “big, beautiful” budget reconciliation package out of the House, but there’s still a long road ahead to President Donald Trump’s desk.
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The package—dubbed the One Big, Beautiful Bill Act—now heads to the Senate. The GOP currently has a 53-47 majority in the upper chamber, and several prominent members of the GOP conference have already voiced concerns about the House-passed version of the bill.
If passed, the bill would fulfill a number of Trump’s campaign promises, such as extending his first-term 2017 tax cuts and funding border security.
As the bill moves to the Senate, here’s which GOP senators are worth keeping an eye on:
Senate Majority Leader John Thune
Sen. John Thune is Senate Republicans’ successor to Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., as conference leader.
Since taking the post, Thune, R-S.D., has proven himself remarkably capable of settling disagreements in his conference, quickly confirming every one of Trump’s Cabinet-level appointees.
Thune has supported House leadership’s reconciliation efforts and has indicated he wants to get the bill passed through the Senate by Independence Day, July 4.
Of House Speaker Mike Johnson’s concessions to blue state Republicans on increasing the cap on state and local tax (SALT) deductions, Thune has told the press, “It’s not an issue that gains or loses votes here in the Senate. This is purely a House play designed to deal with the political challenge they have to get 218.” That number represents a majority in the 435-seat House.
Thune told reporters that he’s hoping to keep the basic structure of the House’s bill intact.
“When it comes over here, I think [Johnson] would like to see as little change to the product as possible, because they cobbled together a very delicate balance over there,” he said.
Sen. Mike Crapo
Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, has expressed hope about the compatibility of the Senate version of the budget reconciliation bill with the House’s.
The Idaho senator, who chairs the powerful Senate Finance Committee, has publicly expressed that he thinks the bill “will probably be the most significant thing that we do in our service in Congress.”
Crapo wields a significant amount of power from his post in the Finance Committee, as he will navigate discussions over tax policy and Medicaid financing.
State and local tax deductions, as well as Medicaid reforms, were the two most contentious issues in the House, and as such, Crapo will have his hands full.
“We’ve been working very closely together to get our work product as close together as we can,” Crapo has said. “I think you’ll see a significant amount of overlap, but there will be differences.”
Sen. Josh Hawley
Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., cautioned against aggressively seeking savings in Medicaid in an op-ed for The New York Times.
He noted that more than 70 million Americans, including 1 million of his constituents in Missouri, are on Medicaid. Hawley said Republicans should “ignore calls to cut Medicaid.”
No Republican should be supporting Medicaid benefit cuts –
We’re the Party of the working class. Time to start acting like it pic.twitter.com/rPFhlQlqxR
— Josh Hawley (@HawleyMO) May 14, 2025
The Missouri senator has also proposed expanding the child tax credit to $5,000, up from the $2,000 figure that was in the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
The tentative number for the new child tax from the House Ways and Means Committee was $2,500 per child, which would eventually revert to $2,000 after 2028.
Sen. Ron Johnson, Other Fiscal Hawks
In the Senate, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., is perhaps the closest equivalent to the conservative House Freedom Caucus members that Trump and House leadership were able to bring into line on Thursday.
Johnson wrote a Wall Street Journal op-ed in May, “The Ugly Truth About the ‘Big Beautiful Bill,’” in which he called the bill’s $1.5 trillion in spending cuts over 10 years “little more than a rounding error.”
It likely will be harder to pressure Johnson than it was to pressure Freedom Caucus members.
“I couldn’t care less if he’s upset,” Johnson said of potential pressure from Trump.
GOP Senator Ron Johnson rips Trump’s “Big, Beautiful Bill”: “I couldn’t care less if he’s upset. I’m concerned about my children and grandchildren. $37 trillion in debt and we’re going to add to it? There is no way I’m going to vote for this bill in its current form.” pic.twitter.com/uTFyi7JK8m
— TheBlaze (@theblaze) May 23, 2025
“I’m concerned about my children, my grandchildren, and the fact that we are stealing from them … $37 trillion in debt and we’re going to add to it as Republicans? That is unacceptable, and that’s why there’s no way I’m going to vote for this bill in its current form.”
Johnson has a couple of ideological soulmates in the Senate. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., has opposed GOP efforts on similar grounds, rejecting the Senate budget resolution that formed the basis for the current bill.
Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, is less of a rebel than Johnson or Paul, but has previously expressed sympathies for Freedom Caucus members’ efforts to implement more aggressive Medicaid reforms in the House.
These three are the most fiscally conservative members of the Senate, but there are a handful of other senators who might also push for more aggressive cuts.
Sen. Susan Collins, Other Centrist Republicans
Sen. Susan Collins, a moderate Republican from Maine, was one of two senators in her party to vote against the Senate’s budget plan in April—which laid the groundwork for the bill coming to the Senate.
Collins joined Hawley and Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, as the only Republicans to vote in April for an amendment that would have struck instructions for the House Energy and Commerce Committee to make massive spending cuts.
Energy and Commerce handles Medicaid spending and has found hundreds of billions of dollars in projected savings by increasing “community engagement” requirements for Medicaid and requiring regular eligibility checks for the program.
Given that the House leadership has appeased fiscal hawks in the House by including earlier implementation of Medicaid work requirements, Collins could take issue with the compromise provisions that made the bill’s passage in the House possible.
Murkowski is another senator to watch closely. The Alaska lawmaker voted against confirming Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, showing her willingness to directly defy Trump’s wishes.
She has also expressed opposition to the GOP’s plans to find savings in Medicaid. Murkowski also has positioned herself as taking a “more cautious and conscientious approach” on ending green energy tax credits that were put into the Inflation Reduction Act signed by then-President Joe Biden.
Those green energy tax credits were just given a quicker expiration date in the House’s bill in order to appease fiscal hawks.
Less than three weeks ago, Murkowski and Collins declined to weigh in on whether they would back the bill.
Then there are those who have the least to lose in breaking party ranks. Most prominent among those is McConnell, who has been cast out of the mainstream of the party after a series of spats with Trump and who voted against a number of Trump’s Cabinet nominees. He is set to retire at the end of his current term.
Share your prayers for the Senate as it tackles the big, beautiful bill below.
This article was originally published at The Daily Signal. Photo Credit: Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America – John Thune, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=139918883.
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Comments
This is not a “Big, Beautiful Bill”. In the long run it will come back to bite us and does not de4al with the lack of budgetary unaccountability of our legislature. We need a balanced budget, not an increase in the debt ceiling of 4 Billion dollars. We really need to pray over this.
Lord God, we place this bill into your handa called (the appropriations bill) this bill must be passed and delivered to Presidents Trump desk that will guide the federal government for each year. God this bill as you know has been in discussion for days, hours. God, first of all I think prayer is most important before any discussion or votes prooceed. Legislation, that is being made is a process of laws making. It is our formal process by which the governments creates and implements rules that governs society. These laws are passed by Congress, state legislatures, or possibly by smaller universities. Father God, we pray for Speaker “Mike Johnson” and the Majority Chair of the APPROPRIATIONS Committee ” Tom Cole” God, this is where we ask you to speak wisdon to both of these key players as they make decesions concerning this bill before it goes to the ” Senate”. I pray that prayer and the presence of God will guide them with knowledge and will be so great that through wisdom that this Big Bill will be guided through this first process before it goes to the presidents desk. The Bible encourages Christians to be subject to governing authorities , recognizing that they are established by God. Romans 13: stresses submission to governing authorities as established by God. God, I pray Proverbs 28: 4″ Those who set aside the law (of God and man) praise the wicked, but those who keep the law (of God and man) struggle with them.” I believe in my spirit that all of the leaders should not give in to wrongdoing those who disregard the law. I pray for these (7) steps especially good statesmanship) that reconciling will not be voices of my way attitude, but that prayer has been said with all wisdom and negotiations and honesty to make correct decesions helping Americans. I pray that negative words will not play an important part in the discussions. I also pray that President Trump will choose wisely and as he reviewes and chooses what God as spoken to him. My prayers are for this bill is for the people and it’s leaders that have no hidden agendas implanted that will cause delays and arguements. God You have given us chance, after chance to keep to your words of authority during these last few months and to remember to pray for all things that need to be done honestly not giving in to spats of members that wants a power in this leadership to keep controlling the ungodly side of all legislative process. These deversions the devil helps himself to will not be accepted, Father, awaken us to the incredible authority we have in Christ transform these leaders and anoint them to stand on higher ground, anoint them who love you to turn the world upside down for this Big Beautiful Bill!!!! “WE DECREE THAT IN THIS SEASON OF HISTORY, THIS BILL AND LEGISLATIVE PROCESS WILL WALK IN HER RIGHTS AS GOD’S AND FULFILL THE RESPONSIBILIY OF YOUR AUTHORITY WHO HAVE FOLLOWED YOUR WORDS TO PASS THIS BILL. ” God, this bill is in your hands, correct anything that needs correcting, change anything thing that will hinder this bill of being a solid bill for America. We thank you Heavenly Father for all of Your advice and authority.
Why is no one mentioning that this bill will add $3 trillion to the $36 trillion debt?
Our deficit is increasing, and as it increases, it will impact Americans in ways that they do not understand. For one, the cost of borrowing will go up, especially in regard to mortgages. And the cost to Americans for paying for the national debt will go up, which will eventually reach the point of increased taxes.
Relooking at who is on Medicaid is not a bad idea. Many were added during COVID as an attempt to move us toward a government health system. Some have reported as many as 25% of Americans are on it now, with some having other options for health insurance.
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please help me explain to my liberal friends the medicare cuts in the bill.
I hope this Bill will go no further – and having heard what has been said on this Memorial Day – and written on this day as a Message – and having followed carefully the words and events of the past 8 or 9 days – I see America in great danger this night.
Father, I pray for wisdom for our Senate as they tackle this bill. I pray for unity. I pray for a heart in each Senator not to spend rashly and increase the federal debt. Help our leaders to walk according to your Word.
For a separate reason, I was reading the parable of the “tares among the wheat” (Matthew 13:24-30) this morning. However, I wonder if there are lessons in the teaching that apply to government legislation, in general, and government budgets, in particular.
LESSON #1: We were asleep for a long time: there are a lot of tares in our Federal budget and Federal administration. We now must pay close unwavering attention and clean the mess up. Part of that process will be electing officials that are committed to balance budgets, are detailed in their focus, and gifted for the task.
LESSON #2: We must make it very, very difficult for new tares to be added, either as legislation or budget items. This means removing more than we add. That should be a best practice to follow, across the board.
LESSON #3: At the “harvest” … the yearly budget making … everything in the past budget must be sorted out. That sounds like “zero base budgeting”, without the past being allowed to continue without verification of results. That will require great wisdom.
Often the most difficult step in fixing a hard problem is deciding that WE WILL FIX THE PROBLEM, versus “managing it” or ignoring it or delaying dealing it. Trying to manage the pain, typically degrades to pain avoidance and the problem persist. Once the commitment is made, executing on the fix becomes possible (James 1:5-8). We should vote for candidates who publicly make that commitment.
Agreed!
“Father, we lift the big, beautiful bill before You as it heads to the Senate. We ask You to give our Senators (everything) as they tackle this critical legislation.”
2 Corinthians 10:5 tells us that we are to “demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.” Holy Spirit, please fill this chamber by empowering the senators do what is necessary to be like Christ. Supply them in their every deliberation and struggle and lead them to truth .
Proverbs 2:15….the plans of the diligent lead to profit as surely as haste leads to poverty. Holy Spirit, please remain in charge until, with diligence and surety, this bill is truly beautiful.
“Oh, Lord GOD! You made the heavens and the earth by Your great power and outstretched arm. Nothing is too difficult for You! I know that You can do all things and that no plan of Yours can be opposed. The passage of bill seems impossible but with You, all things are possible. You are the God of peace., please equip our Senators with every good thing to do Your will. And may You LORD, accomplish in them what is pleasing in Your sight through Jesus Christ. What brings You glory and honor is so good for us. Amen
personalized from Jeremiah 32:17, Job 42:2, Matthew 19:26, Hebrews 13:20-21