Trump, Beautiful Bill
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Sen. Thom Tillis served on the Senate Republican whip team since 2017, but after finding himself at odds with his party and the president, he walked away.
With a July 4 deadline looming, here are the basics of President Donald Trump's Big Beautiful Bill and how the Senate and House versions differ.
The House is planning to vote on the Senate-passed version of President Trump's "Big, Beautiful Bill" as soon as Wednesday morning.
Republicans secure crucial Senate victory for Trump's legislative package featuring tax cuts, spending reductions and immigration funding, with the bill now facing House scrutiny.
The Senate narrowly approved Trump's so-called "One, Big Beautiful Bill" on July 1 on a 51-50 vote after three Republicans defected, requiring Vice President JD Vance to break the tie in a dramatic flourish and send the bill back to the House for final approval, USA TODAY reported.
Following our prior alert on the House Ways & Means Committee version of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (“OBBBA”), the House passed its version of the OBBBA (“House Bill”) on May 22, 2025, and on June 17,
Democrats led by Schumer will require Senate clerks to read the entire 940-page Republican bill, delaying proceedings in a tactical move against Trump's legislative agenda.
The final vote on the bill itself hasn’t happened yet, but it’s expected soon, possibly late Monday, as Republicans race to meet their deadline.
The Senate passed President Donald Trump’s “one big, beautiful bill” on Tuesday morning, but only after senators spent hours negotiating changes to the near-1,000 page sweeping budget legislation. Senate GOP holdouts,
Senate Republicans voted to ram President Donald Trump’s "big, beautiful bill" through a procedural hurdle in a 51-49 vote on Saturday night.
Both Democratic U.S. senators from Arizona, along with the rest of the chamber's Democrats, voted against the Trump-backed "One Big Beautiful Bill."
House Speaker Johnson says President Trump's "big, beautiful bill" will help the GOP in the midterms. Key Senate races are now in the spotlight as Republicans aim to hold their slim majority in 2026.