Trump’s big beautiful bill revived in late-night House vote

House Republicans successfully advanced the “One Big Beautiful Bill” out of the Budget Committee, securing a narrow 17 to 16 vote with four Republicans voting present. This advancement marks a important turn after a previous failed attempt, driven by concessions surrounding Medicaid work requirements and clean energy policies.Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) and the party leadership were able to sway fiscal conservatives who had initially opposed the bill, which aims to cut $1.5 trillion to maintain tax breaks enacted in 2017.

Discussions over the weekend led to modifications in the bill, particularly pushing up the start date for Medicaid work requirements from 2029 to 2026.Johnson emphasized the importance of establishing actionable work requirements as soon as feasible. The bill now moves to the House Rules Committee for final adjustments, with Johnson targeting a full House vote by Thursday, hoping to finalize legislation before the Memorial Day holiday. However, some Republican members expressed concerns regarding the changes made and the necessity for clarity moving forward.


Republicans muscle the ‘big beautiful bill’ out of the Budget Committee

House Republicans secured enough support to push the “one big beautiful” reconciliation package out of the Budget Committee late Sunday night.

The late-night victory for Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) and President Donald Trump came after GOP fiscal hawks relented due to concessions from leadership related to Medicaid and clean energy policy repeals.

The Budget Committee voted the One Big Beautiful Bill Act out of committee, 17 to 16, with four Republicans voting present.

This was the committee’s second attempt to pass the bill after it failed on Friday, with five Republicans voting against the legislation, which cuts $1.5 trillion to offset the cost of preserving the president’s 2017 tax breaks. Four of the five were displeased with the legislation’s timeline for Medicaid work requirements and the ambiguity over raising the state and local taxes cap.

Republicans spoke with leadership throughout the weekend before coming back to Capitol Hill for the rare 10 p.m. committee vote. Johnson told reporters ahead of the vote that talks have “gone great” and “minor modifications” were made to the legislation.

Punchbowl News reported that leadership discussed pushing up the Medicaid work requirements’ effective date from 2029 to 2026 after a strong push from the fiscal conservatives who argued the GOP was frontloading spending and backloading savings.

Johnson said he wouldn’t provide details on the changes made with fiscal hawks when asked about the 2026 date.

“I think it’s the desire of every Republican, always has been to make work requirements real and actionable as soon as possible. We learned in the process that some of the states needed a longer lag time to add in the implementation of the new policy. So we’re going to … make it happen sooner, as soon as possible. And I think that’s a good change in the policy.”

Heading into the vote Friday, the bill was perceived as dead on arrival in the Budget Committee given at least three of the five original detractors — Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX), Ralph Norman (R-SC), and Rep. Andrew Clyde (R-GA) — said earlier in the week they had issues with the legislation and were strongly opposed to voting for it in committee.

But Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington (R-TX) told reporters that Friday’s vote served as a “catalyst” to push discussions forward.

“You never know until you call the question where people stand, which is the reason I called for a vote,” Arrington said. “You can’t accomplish anything in life without having deadlines and decisions. Today was a deadline and a decision, and it’s one of the decision points to get us to the successful passage of the reconciliation bill.”

Rep. Michael Cloud (R-TX), a Freedom Caucus member involved in discussions with leadership on Sunday, said many of the hangups with fiscal hawks center around the delays in work requirements and the delay of repealing certain areas of the Inflation Reduction Act.

Roy, Clyde, Norman, and Rep. Josh Brecheen (R-OK) voted “present” on Sunday night. Johnson had previewed to reporters that he expected the present votes, noting that there are more details to iron out.

Norman said, “In an effort to move this bill forward, and I’m excited about the changes we’ve made, I vote present.” Some Democrats called out, “What changes?”

Ranking member Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-PA) had asked Arrington at the start of the vote to provide details on the changes made, but the chairman deflected and said all the alterations would be discussed in a forthcoming Rules Committee hearing.

BIG BEAUTIFUL BILL IN THE BALANCE: GOP FRACTURES OVER MEDICAID WORK REQUIREMENTS

“We’ve seen this play before, where things get kicked down the road, and so we’re not wanting to stand for it,” Cloud told the Washington Examiner.

“We’ve been working for several months, constantly doing our best to be diplomatic and give leeway for maneuverability at every single point,” he added. “But we’re to the point now to where there’s no more steps for that. Now’s the time to deliver, and so we’ve got to make sure that leadership is committed to doing that.”

The legislation now heads to the House Rules Committee, likely on Tuesday or Wednesday, where the final adjustments will be made. Johnson wants a full House vote on Thursday to meet his deadline of passage before the Memorial Day holiday.



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