The GOP of the Senate reduces expenses in the Bill “ Grand et Beau ” while tax hawks grow to more cuts

The Senate Republicans are approaching a vote to reduce more than $ 1.6 billion of public spending over a decade within the “big and beautiful” bill of President Donald Trump – and the conference could promulgate more cuts in the last hours before a vote on the final adoption.
Trump and the Senate Republicans boost the highest reduction in compulsory expenditure in American history in the budgetary bill of the upper chamber. The Senate’s proposal exceeds the estimated economies of the initial house of $ 200 billion over a period of ten years, exceeding the objective of the Senate Republicans to reduce spending by $ 1.5 Billion over a period of ten years. (Related: “Pure and simple massacre”: the Senate GOP takes Sledgehammer to the Green Energy Government subsidies)
The head of the majority of the Senate, John Thune, also made an effort to obtain more reductions in the law of the President on tax alternatives and immigration.
The deficit reduction measurement is sponsored by the Republican senator from Florida Rick Scott and would reduce the federal correspondence rate by 90% for the new registered MEDICAID registrations in the states that have expanded coverage under the affordable care law. A group of senators designed by deficit, including Scott, helped obtain a vote on the amendment, which will occur during a planned marathon voting session, known as “vote-a-rama”, before the senators vote on the final adoption of the bill.
“We think it’s a very good policy,” Thune told journalists on Sunday. “We are going to do what we can to support this effort.”
“There is a high level of interest in our conference to be part of the final bill,” added Thune. “I don’t know how Republicans could not be favorable.”
The amendment could however die on the Senate soil due to the moderate opposition of GOP senators to reducing federal government contributions to Medicaid state programs, known as the percentage of federal medical assistance (FMAP). Scott’s proposal, notably exempts the existing expansion population on the Medicaid rolls.
Trump notably thanked Scott and the Hawks tax cohort for finally supporting the opening of the debate on the bill on Saturday evening. The president said he would work with the group to “reduce unnecessary spending” and “make sure that our Medicaid system helps those who really need it”, among other priorities, in a press release on the social media platform.
Washington, DC – June 26: Senator Rick Scott (R -FL) arrives for a classified briefing to the theme of Iran on June 26, 2025 in Washington, DC. Trump administration officials informed senators after US military strikes last weekend on Iran. (Photo by Joe Raedle / Getty Images)
The majority of 1.6 billion of dollars of cuts over a decade within the Senate budget bill come from the reduction of federal spending for Medicaid and Medicare with the vast majority of economies from the first.
“We make common sense reforms to Medicaid To eliminate waste, fraud and abuse and protect the program for those who need it most, “said the head of the majority of the Senate, John Thune, during a Senate soil speech on June 17, which presented ambitious reforms of his conference on the law.
The Senate Republicans propose to implement national work requirements for certain valid adults on Medicaid and to reprimand the use by certain states of service providers to collect federal funding from additional Medicaid.
Thune presented these reforms as “common sense” measures to curb Federal Medicaid expenses, which should travel to more than $ 650 billion in 2025, an increase of 60% between 2019 and 2025. The majority leader also argued that Medicaid must be “strengthened” to serve pregnant women, children, immigrants and immigrants and the pursuit of coverage. As some blue states have done.
The head of the majority has also argued several times to reduce the ceiling on suppliers in the MEDICAIDE expansion states, arguing that the tax maneuver allows states to unjustly take advantage of more federal dollars to states budgets. Thune and other Republicans in the Senate also argued that providers’ taxes oblige the federal government to contribute more dollars for valid adult coverage rather than vulnerable Medicaid groups is intended to serve.
Under the current republicans of the Senate republicans, provider of service providers would gradually be reduced to 3.5% in the MEDICAID expansion states from 2028 – a provision which should lead to hundreds of billions of savings. A number of moderate GOP senators, including Thom Tillis de Northern Caroline, have expressed profound objections to this proposal, citing billions of dollars in Medicaid funding that their states could lose.
Other Medicaid reforms that would cause savings could also be incorporated into the UPPPER’s final budget bill, but will remain as a parliamentarian of the Elizabeth Macdonough Senate, an unaduminated official with disproportionate influence on the process of budget reconciliation, continues to examine the provisions to ensure compliance with budgetary rules.
Although Macdonough has signed the vast majority of the provisions that Democrats have challenged as violating the budgetary rules, several provisions related to Medicaid have been reported as non -compliant and must be revised to be included in the final package.
These provisions include the reduction of Federal Medicaid contributions to states that offer health care to illegal immigrants through state funds and prohibiting access by illegal immigrants to Medicaid dollars. Macdonough has not yet ruled if Republicans can move forward with the ban on abortion suppliers, such as Planned Parenthood, to receive Medicaid funds.
Although Trump has criticized Macdonough’s influence on the final form of his bill, he did not explicitly called his ouster unlike several Republicans in the Chamber and the Senate.
The management of the GOP Senate was also in offense against the messages of the Democrats accusing the historic bill of the president “to eliminate Medicaid” with the imposition of work requirements among other reforms. This proposal would oblige valid adults, including those who have children aged 14 and over, to work, look for work, volunteer or be at school for at least 20 hours per week.
“A study by the American Enterprise Institute recently found valid adults on Medicaid who do not work to spend 4.2 hours every day watching television and playing video games,” wrote in an editorial of the majority of the Senate for the Daily Caller News Foundation. “It’s 125 hours a month. They should work – or at least looking for a job. ”
“Les Républicains du Senate offer a path responsible for self-repair for people with melee and working age,” added Barrasso. “More bodies funded by taxpayers.”
The budgetary bill of the upper chamber also reduces expenses in green energy grants by accelerating the termination of solar and wind tax credits, which could save hundreds of billions of dollars from taxpayers.
The Senate proposal must erase the Chamber before Trump signs the budget bill. A certain number of moderate republicans in the lower room express their concern about the reductions in aggressive expenditure while the members of the Caucus Conservative of the Freedom Caucus are pressure for a reduction more deficit.
“For all the cost of the Republican Cup, of which I am one, remember, you must always be re-elected,” wrote Trump on the social media platform Truth Social sunday evening. “Don’t go too crazy!”
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