“ Big Beautiful Bill ” of Trump goes to the vote on a house scale after the approval of the Committee

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The Rules of the Chamber Committee implemented on Wednesday the “big and beautiful bill” of President Donald Trump for a vote on the scale of the Chamber after a session of almost 12 hours debating massive legislation.
He is now heading to the whole Chamber to consider, where several Republicans have already pointed out that they are concerned with various aspects of the measure.
Only two Republicans voted against the declaration of the bill outside the Committee – the representatives Ralph Norman, Rs.C., and Chip Roy, R -Texas, conservatives who had expressed reservations with the bill earlier on Tuesday. No democrat voted to move it forward, while the remaining seven Republicans have done so.
The majority of republican legislators seem ready to advance the bill, however, believing that it is the best compromise vehicle possible to make the promises of Trump’s campaign a reality.
National debt tracker: American taxpayers (you) are now hung for more than 36,215,806,064,740.36

The agenda of President Donald Trump is making its way through the congress. (Fox News / Getty Images)
“This bill is President Trump’s agenda, and we make it the right. The House Republicans are ready to complete the work and put the only major bill on the office of President Trump in time for independence,” said GOP leaders in a joint statement after the Senate adopted the bill on Tuesday.
The House Rules Committee acts as a final guardian before most of the elements of legislation obtained a vote on the scale of the Chamber.
The Democrats tried to delay the hearing of several hours of the panel by offering several amendments which were slaughtered according to the parties of the party.
They criticized the bill as a gift of inflated tax reduction to the rich Americans, to the detriment of the coverage of Medicaid for low -income people. Democrats also accused the Republicans of adding billions of dollars to national debt, mainly by extending Trump’s tax cuts in 2017.
“I do not know what it means to be a tax hawk, because if you vote for this bill, you add 4 billions of dollars to debt,” said representative Gwen Moore, D-Calif., During the measurement debate.
“The Republicans left on television for months and months and months solemnly emphasizing the American people that this bill will reduce the debt, that it will not hurt anyone on Medicaid, just these lazy tramps and, you know, unworthy people.”
The Republicans challenge the “unrelevant” budget office criticizing Trump’s “beautiful bill”
But the Republicans said that the bill is a targeted relief for the Americans in the middle and working class, invoking provisions allowing people to deduce procurement taxes and overtime, among others.
“If you vote against this bill, you vote against the children’s tax credit at $ 2,200 per child. At the end of this year, it will increase to $ 1,000. This has a huge impact on 40 million workers.
“If you listen to the Democrats here, they say that all of this concerns billionaires and millionaires. No tax on advice, no tax on work in overtime. How many millionaires and billionaires, president of Madam, work through work by work through work hour?”

Ways & Means president Jason Smith defended the bill during the committee debate. (Tom Williams)
The bill makes up more than 900 pages and includes Trump’s priorities on taxes, the border, defense, energy and national debt.
An initial version adopted the Chamber in May by a single vote, but the Senate has since made several key modifications to Medicaid, tax reductions and debt limit.
The moderates are wary of the Senate measures which transfer more costs of Medicaid to the states which extended their programs under Obamacare, while the Conservatives declared These cuts are not enough To compensate for additional expenses in other parts of the invoice.
Several key measures have also been deleted during the “Bain Byrd”, a process in the Senate where legislation is examined so that it can be accelerated within the framework of the budgetary reconciliation process – which must join a strict set of budgetary rules.
Among these conservative criticisms, the representatives Scott Perry, R-P-Pa., And Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., Introduced resolutions to change the version of the Senate to various degrees.
The amendment of Ogles would have changed the bill most radically. If it is adopted, he would have returned the legislation to the version of the Chamber.
Perry’s amendments aimed to tighten the decline in green energy tax credits created by the law on the reduction of inflation of the former Biden administration.
Another amendment by the representative Andrew Clyde, R-GA., Would have restored certain provisions linked to the second amendment stripped by the Byrd bath.

President Mike Johnson said he wanted the Chamber to take the bill immediately. (Images Kevin Dietsch / Getty)
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Any modification to the legislation would have forced it to the Senate, probably delaying the self-imposed deadline of the Republicans of July 4 to put the bill on the office of Trump.
The full house should start to consider the bill at 9 a.m. HE Wednesday.
That morning, the legislators of the Chamber will vote on the advisability of starting to debate the bill, a procedural measure known as “voting rules”.
If this is authorized, a final vote on the bill itself is expected a little later Wednesday.
President Mike Johnson, R -La., conceded Tuesday evening that the bad weather in Washington, which forced a number of flight delays could also weigh on Wednesday attendance – according to the number of legislators trapped outside the capital.
“We closely monitor the weather,” said Johnson to journalists. “There is a lot of delays at the moment.”
With all the legislators present, the Republicans cannot afford to lose three votes to advance the vote of the rules and the final bill without any democratic support.