Trump Ally wants a third term, Mount Rushmore Spot for the President

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An ally of the key room of President Donald Trump calls on the republican leader to be eligible for a third mandate from the White House on the adoption of his “big and beautiful bill”.
Representative Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., Also called Trump to be added to Mount Rushmore in southern Dakota alongside George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln.
“I was at the White House with President Trump for several hours yesterday and I spent countless hours to votes with President Johnson for the only major bill. This historic legislation will trigger our economy and inaugurate a new golden age for America,” Ogles to Fox News Digital told the adoption of the bill.
“Thanks to President Trump, we finally reverse the damage caused by the great government and the democratic friends. Victories like this are exactly why it deserves serious consideration for a third term – and why so many people believe that it is up to Mont Rushmore.”
Tax reductions, work requirements and asylum costs: this is what is inside the version of the Senate of the Trump bill

The representative Andy Ogles pushes President Trump to be able to have a third term. (Getty Images)
Ogles had previously introduced a resolution to give Trump the ability to present himself for a third term as president.
He was also seen in the White House in advance at the last stage of the Congress, advancing the Trump tax and immigration bill. Ogles was also present on the soil of the House during tense negotiations on the bill, addressing both republican retained and chamber heads.
The legislation narrowly adopted Thursday afternoon after a marathon session in the House of Representatives which started with a meeting of the Rules of the House Rules to advance it at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, which ended nearly 12 hours later Wednesday morning.
The legislators of the Chamber then gathered to debate the bill at 9 am on Wednesday, although these procedures were delayed for hours while the leaders of the GOP in the Chamber – and Trump himself – worked to persuade criticism on closed doors.
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Chamber Mike Johnson, R-La., Inaugurated the Trump reconciliation bill through the room. (Nathan Posner / Anadolu via Getty Images)
The bill has more than 900 pages and advances the Trump agenda on taxes, the border, defense, energy and national debt.
The bill would permanently extend the income tax tranches lowered by the Trump Trump Trump (TCJA) Trump Reducts Act, while temporarily adding new tax deductions to eliminate rights over advocacy in matters of divers and overtime to certain ceilings. It also includes a new tax deduction for people aged 65 and over.
The legislation also refers to the tax credits on green energy implemented under the law on the reduction of inflation of former president Joe Biden, which Trump and his allies attacked as “the new green scam”.
The bill would also increase money to national defense and to the application of immigration and customs (ICE) in the name of Trump’s repression against illegal immigrants in the United States
The bill would also increase the limit of debt by $ 5 billion in order to avoid a potentially devastating lack of credit economically this summer, if the United States lacked liquidity to pay for its obligations.

The bill would increase money to national defense and to the application of immigrants and customs (ICE) in the name of Trump’s repression against illegal immigrants in the United States (Fox News)
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New and enlarged work requirements would be implemented for Medicaid and federal food assistance, respectively.
The Democrats criticized the bill as a tax gift to the rich while reducing the federal advantages for the Americans of the working class.
But the Republicans declared that their tax provisions aimed at the work classes and the middle classes – citing measures eliminating the taxes on slope wages and overtime – while arguing that they reformed federal social protection programs to function better for those who really need them.