Trump Tax Bill has stalled in the middle of the tax mutiny threats of the Hawk tax gop

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Wednesday afternoon, the legislative agenda of President Donald Trump stops temporarily at the House of Representatives.
The plans for a vote in the early afternoon to start the debate on the “big and beautiful bill” of Trump escaped both the conservative concerns and the weather delays led to questions by adopting two procedural votes before the critical measure.
It is not clear if the key vote will take place today at this stage. The president of the Caucus of House Freedom, Andy Harris, R-MD., One of the greatest criticisms of the bill, told journalists that a vote was still “possible”.
“No, not yet,” he said when he was asked if he got what he needed the White House to support the measure. “But the evening is so young.”
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The president of the Caucus of House Freedom, Andy Harris, opposes the version of the Senate of the “Big and Beautiful Bill” of President Donald Trump. (Getty Images)
The leaders of the GOP of the Chamber had hoped to vote to start the debate on the vast bill on taxes and immigration, a maneuver known as “voting rules”, in order to put a vote on the final adoption of the legislation at the end of Wednesday or early Thursday at the latest.
The president ordered the Republicans to obtain a bill at his office for a signature by July 4, although he suggested in some recent comments that he would not care for a few days.
The vote of the rule was to be the third in a series in early afternoon of three votes. In the early evening Wednesday, this vote is still held open and the room of the room is actually paralyzed.
The legislators who expected a vote to return to their offices to wait for other instructions.
The members of the Caucus of the Freedom Caucus of multiple who left a meeting next to the ground of the Chamber refused to comment on what they discussed, but several have clearly indicated in recent days that they had serious problems with the version of the Senate of the bill on the agenda of Trump.
The gigantic legislation includes the Trump agenda on taxes, border, energy, defense and national debt.

The director of management and budget management, Russell Vought, was briefly in the room with restrained. (Kayla Bartkowski / Getty Images)
The director of the Management and Budget Office, Russell Vought, was briefly seen entering and leaving the room where the tax hawks were gathered.
He said little about journalists other than to announce that they “made good progress” when leaving the play.
Representative Chip Roy, R-Texas suggested that the conservatives were talking to the Trump administration of how Republicans could compensate for what they considered in the current version of the bill.
The tax hawks were irritated by the last -minute measures taken to appease the moderates of the GOP Senate which were uncomfortable as to the elimination of most subsidies to the energy tax of the bill in the law on the reduction of inflation of former President Joe Biden (IRA).
The Senate is adopted from `Big and Beautiful Bill ” from Trump after the marathon-a-rama vote
They also argued that the Senate bill would add more to the federal deficit than the previous version of the Chamber, although the Republicans of the Senate have rejected.
“We were not satisfied with what the Senate produced. We thought that there was a long -term path last week, even if I had public worries about them. But then they blurred it in the last minute in a way that, you know, we were not too excited,” said Roy. “So now we are trying to understand what our options are from this point.”

Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, outside the American Capitol after the last votes before the recess of August on July 25, 2024. (Tom Williams / CQ-Roll Call, included via Getty Images)
Other representatives, such as Keith Self, R-Texas and Josh Brecheen, R-Okla., Refused to comment on the meeting to journalists.
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The representative Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., Who is not a member of the Freedom Caucus but who had concerns about the bill, told journalists by leaving the meeting: “I’m just waiting to see what is happening honestly. Everyone is discussing what’s going on and trying to achieve (resolution).”
Burchett told journalists earlier that he was leaning over in favor of the vote to debate the bill.
But President Mike Johnson, R-La., Can only afford three defections to pass the bill according to the festive lines.
“We are going to get there tonight,” Johnson told journalists.