Will the vice-president JD Vance have to issue another shooting vote

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Vice-president JD Vance could issue the voting to shoot the American Senate for the “Big, Beautiful, Beld, Bill” by President Donald Trump if he does not receive sufficient support from the Republican legislators.
The Republicans rush to reform and adopt the measure before the deadline of July 4 of Trump after determining the parliamentarian of the Senate Elizabeth Macdonough Thursday according to which several reforms of Medicaid in the Radical Tax and Political Package did not follow the rules of the Senate and must be deleted.
As president of the Senate, the vice-president expresses a shooting vote when a measure does not receive majority support.
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Vice-president JD Vance at a meeting with Taoiseach Micheál Martin before the reception of the Saint-Patrick of the White House in Washington in March. (Images Niall Carson / PA via Getty Images)
There are 53 Republicans in the Senate, which means that three Republican senators may not vote for the bill, and this could always adopt the support of Vance.
Vance previously expressed shooting votes in the Senate, especially in January to confirm Trump’s choice for the Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, and on a measure in April to limit Trump’s ability to impose world prices.
The Vance office refused to comment to Fox News Digital.
Republican legislators who have historically expressed concerns about certain Medicaid provisions included in the “Big, Beautiful, Bill” include Susan Collins of Maine, Josh Hawley of Missouri and Lisa Murkowski from Alaska. These legislators have warned that the reforms would prove to be harmful to the rural hospitals of their states.
Collins spokesperson, Hawley and Murkowski did not immediately respond to a request for comments from Fox News Digital.

Senator Josh Hawley (Bill Clark / CQ-Roll Call, included via Getty Images)
The internal policy package also included provisions to strengthen border security and also make the law on tax reductions and 2017 jobs for Trump’s first mandate permanently.
The director of management and budget of the White House, Russell Vought, told legislators earlier this month to adopt the measure would result in a 60% tax increase for Americans and trigger a recession.
Consequently, Matt Wolking, who previously was deputy director of communications for Trump’s campaign in 2020, said that the Senate Republicans would finally regain to approve the legislation to prevent exhaust tax reductions.
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“The Republicans of the Senate do not want to be responsible for the massive increase in tax in the middle class which will occur if they do not manage to extend the tax cuts of President Trump. So, in the end, they will”, Wolking, currently with the consulting company Gop Axiom Strategies, in a press release at Fox News Digital.
“President Trump has a big asset in these negotiations with JD Vance, and if it is necessary to break or not, the administration will have another major victory to his credit in front of the mid-term elections where the force of the economy will be an important factor,” said Wolking.

Senator Susan Collins, R-Maine, with supporters outside the Kittery Trading Post, where she was welcomed by the vice-president of the KTP, Fox Keim. (Rich Beauchesne / Seacoastonline)
Earlier this month, Vance met the Republican senators to discuss the measure during a lunch in camera and then declared that he hoped for the chances of adopting the legislation in time.
“I mean, look, I can’t make promises. … I can’t predict the future, but I think we are in the right place to do so by the recess of July 4,” said journalists on June 17.
Vance also told journalists that despite the concerns of the legislators, including Collins, concerning certain Medicaid provisions included in the measure, he would work to solve the problems raised. However, he said that there was a large agreement within the party on Medicaid reform to block access to illegal immigrants.
“They are all very confident that we will finally get there,” said Vance.
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President Donald Trump holds a photo of Katie Abraham while his father, Joe Abraham, on the left, looks during an event to promote the agenda of the interior policy and the budget of Trump in the east house of the White House. (AP photo / Mark Schiefelbein)
The Chamber narrowly adopted its version of the measurement in May by a margin of 215-214, two Republicans voted against the legislation.
Trump urged legislators to bring legislation to the finish line on Thursday, labeling the measure “the most important border border legislation to cross the Congress soil”.
“It is the ultimate codification of our agenda for – very simply, a sentence that has been well used by me in the past 10 years, but perhaps even before that – make America again large,” said Trump in a “big and beautiful event” in the White House on Thursday.