GOP leaders warn the Senate not to break the `Delicate balance ” in Trump’s bill

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First on Fox: The best republicans in the chamber warn the Senate to proceed with the possible modifications to the “large and beautiful bill” of President Donald Trump.
“We, in the house, do not want it to change too much. Of course, they will put their mark on it, and they will shape it and, hope, improve it, but, yes, that can simply not change too much materially so that we have to put on this needle,” said the president of the Republican Study Committee (RSC) August Pfluger, R-Texas.
He welcomed the chairman of the chamber budget committee, Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, on an episode of the RSC podcast, “Dright to the Point”, whose early copy was obtained by Fox News Digital.
Arrington said to Pfluger: “The reality is that we found a very difficult and very delicate balance in the Chamber which could be disturbed on a certain number of political fronts, if the Senate was going to go too far.”
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The head of the majority of the Senate, John Thune, Rs.d., is seen after the Senate lunches in the American Capitol on Tuesday, June 24, 2025. (Tom Williams / CQ-Roll Call, included via Getty Images)
The RSC is a member group of 189 people in the GOP Chamber which acts as the Conference Conservative Conservative Reflection Group.
The Arrington Committee, on the other hand, plays a central role in the Budget reconciliation process – This is what the Republicans use to adopt the Trump agenda on tax, immigration, energy, defense and national debt in a massive bill.
It should be noted that they used the weekly RSC podcast to send a sharp message to their colleagues to the Senate, who comes as legislators who fight with key questions in the version of the Bill Chamber.
The Senate Republicans still have to face unresolved questions on the deductions of Medicaid and State and Local Tax (Salt), among others.
The Republicans challenge the “unrelevant” budget office criticizing Trump’s “beautiful bill”

The president of the Républicain Study Committee of the Chamber, August PFLUGER, sent a pointed message to the Senate. (Bill Clark / CQ-Roll Call, included via Getty Images)
The leaders of the GOP of the Senate said that their changes to the bill were essential to survive their thin majority as the razor – the same margin as the room.
The Chamber adopted its version of the bill by one vote at the end of May. From now on, various GOP House factions warn that they will not accept the proposed changes of the Senate on a certain number of key questions.
“If you and I had the pen, and it was only between two western Texans, I know that there are deeper and deeper budgetary reforms that would fold the even more spectacular curve on our expenses and our debts towards GDP. But we have other members with which we must negotiate,” said Arrington.
“So yes, go as well as you can do it in terms of improvements, but there is a moment at which you are going, instead of leaning, you will break the delicate balance, and you will endanger the most important and most consecutive bill – with the largest set of conservative reforms in my life, if not 100 years.”
When he was contacted to comment on Arrington’s remark, the leader’s leader’s office office John Thune pointed Fox News Digital to the appearance of the Southern Dakota Republican in the Hugh Hewitt show on Wednesday.
“I met (the president of the Mike Johnson room, R-La.) Yesterday, and we already talked several times today, simply checking various aspects of the Senate bill and, you know, what are the prospects when they arrive in the room,” said Thune. “So there was a lot of coordination from the start about this and that, you know, continues to date, which is why we continue to stay in close contact.”
Johnson, Thune and the White House were in almost constant communication, hammering the big and small details in the bill.

The chairman of the chamber budget committee, Jodey Arrington, said that the Senate should “make it as good” as possible without changing it a lot. (Mateo Rosiles / Avalanche-Journal / USA Today Network via Imagn Images)
Pfluger said that he was still “full of hope”, however, about the self-imposed deadline for the Republicans.
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“The Senate is struggling with this bill at the moment … to make the changes that improve it, but to send it back in a disciplined manner, where we know that we always collect the savings where we do the right things to put money in pockets of American families,” said Pfluger.
Johnson told journalists on Friday that he was “possible” that the deadline could slip, but said he “did not want to accept this as an option at the moment”.
Alex Miller de Fox News Digital contributed to this report