Senate Passes Trump’s Big Bill, but House Hardliners Threaten Revolt

Happy July 1, or as it's known to some here in New York, Bobby Bonilla Day. In Washington, D.C, President Donald Trump's signature policy bill squeaked through the Senate by the slimmest of margins and will now head back to the House, where it still faces some uncertainty. We've got your Tuesday evening update.
Senate Passes Trump's Big Bill, but House Hardliners Threaten Revolt
Senate Republicans on Tuesday narrowly passed their massive package of tax and spending cuts, capping a tumultuous marathon voting-and-negotiating session that lasted more than 26 hours by delivering what could be a resounding and historic win for President Donald Trump's agenda - albeit one that is expected to markedly worsen the nation's fiscal trajectory and weaken social safety net programs, which could also make it an albatross around the necks of Republicans in 2026 and beyond.
Polls have found the legislation to be deeply unpopular with voters, and more than a few Republicans in the Senate expressed concerns about various elements of the package. In the end, senators were evenly divided on the bill, but enough Republicans rallied behind the effort to secure a 50-50 tie, which Vice President JD Vance broke with a vote in favor of passage.
Republican Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Rand Paul of Kentucky and Thom Tillis of North Carolina joined with 47 Democrats in opposing the package. Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, considered a potential swing vote, backed the legislation after winning a host of concessions that would protect her state from some of the harshest cuts in the bill.
The vote sends the package back to the House, where it may face renewed opposition from conservatives angered by Senate changes that would increase the cost of the legislation and from moderates concerned about sweeping Medicaid cuts. Still, Republicans are progressing toward their goal of having the bill to Trump's desk by July 4.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune hailed the GOP victory, saying that the bill will spur economic growth, strengthen the military, secure U.S. borders, ramp up American energy production and cut waste, fraud and abuse from federal programs. "With this legislation, we are fulfilling the mandate we were entrusted with last November and setting our country - and the American people - up to be safer, stronger, and more prosperous," he said in remarks on the Senate floor.
What's in the megabill: As a reminder, the Republican plan is poised to
- Permanently extend the party's 2017 tax cuts;
- Enact the new tax cuts Trump campaigned on, including those for tip income (up to $25,000 a year) and overtime pay (up to $12,500 a year) as well as new tax breaks for seniors and interest on certain auto loans;
- Cut more than $1 trillion in healthcare funding, primarily from Medicaid. The plan would introduce new work requirements for both Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), commonly known as food stamps, and would require some states to bear some of the costs of the food aid;
- Phase out clean energy tax credits enacted by Democrats;
- Lift the cap on the state and local tax deduction from $10,000 to $40,000 until 2030, with the benefit phasing out for those making more than $500,000 a year;
- Provide funding boosts of about $157 billion for the Pentagon and $175 billion for immigration enforcement;
- Expand the Child Tax Credit;
- Lift the federal debt limit by $5 trillion.
A massive bill with massive costs: In all, a version of the Senate plan analyzed by the Congressional Budget Office was found to include roughly $4.5 trillion in net tax cuts and $1.2 trillion in net spending cuts, meaning that it would add about $3.3 trillion to deficits over 10 years, or closer to $4 trillion including additional interest costs.
The Senate did not abide by an agreement, made to win over conservatives in the House, to tie the amount of tax cuts to the level of spending cuts. The House budget reconciliation instructions called for up to $2 trillion in spending cuts to go with $4.5 trillion in tax cuts, with changes on one side of the ledger to be matched on the other side. The Senate bill includes the full $4.5 trillion in tax cuts but falls short by $600 billion or more on the spending side, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a nonprofit that advocates for deficit reduction.
"The level of blatant disregard we just witnessed for our nation's fiscal condition and budget process is a failure of responsible governing. These are the very same lawmakers who for years have bemoaned the nation's massive debt, voting to put another $4 trillion on the credit card," said CRFB President Maya MacGuineas. "If made permanent, the Senate bill would cost more than the CARES Act, the American Rescue Plan, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, and the CHIPS Act, combined."
The plan is also expected to result in at least 17 million Americans losing their health coverage due by 2034 to the Medicaid cuts and the expiration of enhanced subsidies for Affordable Care Act plans, which would raise out-of-pocket costs for people signing up through those marketplaces. Those losses would undo gains seen in the years since the ACA was enacted - and they run contrary to a promise from Trump that the plan would only go after waste, fraud and abuse in Medicaid and that Americans would not feel a change.
Some late changes to the bill: The messy overnight process saw some amendments to the bill. The final Senate legislation still includes a harsher crackdown on Medicaid provider taxes, which states use to boost the federal funding they receive for the program. But a controversial new excise tax on wind and solar energy projects was removed from the final bill. "The bill still phases out solar and wind tax credits rather quickly, and will damage energy production that is needed to keep up with soaring demand," writes David Dayen of The American Prospect, a liberal publication. "But it's dialed down from apocalyptic to, well, nearly apocalyptic."
The Senate also voted to establish a $50 billion, five-year stabilization fund for rural hospitals affected by healthcare cuts in the legislation, and, in a 99-1 vote, it stripped out a provision barring states from regulating AI.
Murkowski makes out big-time: Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski held plenty of leverage as the potential make-or-break vote in the Senate, and she used that leverage in backroom negotiations to win significant breaks for her state. Though some of the Alaska-specific provisions got thrown out by the parliamentarian, Murkowski reportedly succeeded in getting a waiver from the SNAP cost-sharing provision. Because of parliamentary rules, the change will reportedly also benefit other states with the highest SNAP payment error rates.
Murkowski reportedly also got a tax break for Alaskan fisheries and Native Alaskan subsistence whaling.
Still, in a post on X, she called the vote one of the hardest of her time in the Senate. "This has been an awful process-a frantic rush to meet an artificial deadline that has tested every limit of this institution. While we have worked to improve the present bill for Alaska, it is not good enough for the rest of our nation-and we all know it," she wrote. "My sincere hope is that this is not the final product. This bill needs more work across chambers and is not ready for the President's desk. We need to work together to get this right."
Democrats were incensed: "Today, Senate Republicans betrayed the American people and covered this chamber in shame," Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said after the vote. "In one fell swoop, Senate Republicans passed the biggest tax breaks for billionaires ever seen, paid for by ripping healthcare away from millions of Americans, taking food out of the mouths of hungry kids."
Schumer also complained that Republicans "bent and twisted and pushed the rules and the norms of the Senate to get this bill done." Republicans bypassed longstanding budget norms and set the official cost estimate for the bill using a "current policy baseline" that zeroed out the cost of $3.8 trillion in tax cuts.
Schumer predicted that the vote will haunt Republicans for years. "As the American people see the damage that is done, as hospitals close, as people are laid off, as costs go up, as the debt increases, they will see what our colleagues have done, and they will remember it," he said.
The Senate's top Democrat scored one tiny, largely meaningless win: Using Senate procedure, he forced Republicans' official title for the legislation, "The One Big Beautiful Bill Act," to be removed. (Republicans had done the same with Democrats' 2022 Inflation Reduction Act.)
What's next: The House is expected back in session on Wednesday to take up the bill again. With Trump's July 4 deadline for the bill looming, House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said that Democrats would do what they could to extend the process. But Democrats won't be able to stop the bill if Republicans stick together.
House Speaker Mike Johnson had urged senators to minimize changes to the bill for fear of undoing the delicate balance he had struck among his members. That didn't happen. "I'm not happy with what the Senate did to our product. We understand this is the process. It goes back and forth, and we'll be working to get all of our members to yes," Johnson said Tuesday.
Now, the question may be whether House conservatives who have warned that they will not back the Senate bill because of its higher deficit spending are willing to abide by that and anger Trump or whether moderates decide to make a stand over Medicaid cuts.
Reps. Andy Harris and Ralph Norman of the House Freedom Caucus both said Tuesday that they will vote against a procedural rule setting up debate on the bill, raising the prospect of a conservative revolt against the package. Republicans can lose only three votes. The House could still see some fireworks before July 4.
Trump Tours 'Alligator Alcatraz'
As the megabill drama played out in Washington on Tuesday, President Trump paid a visit to a new migrant detention center in the Florida Everglades dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz."
Joined by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Trump toured the facility, which features rows of bunk beds inside chain-link cages, set inside air-conditioned tents. Built on the grounds of the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport and ringed by barbed wire, the center was constructed in just eight days, DeSantis said, after receiving approval from federal authorities last week.
The facility will cost the state of Florida about $450 million per year to run, with much of that money to be reimbursed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency as part of its shelter and services program. DeSantis said the first inmate is expected to arrive as soon as Wednesday.
With up to 5,000 beds, it will be the largest migrant detention center in the U.S. and will play a central role in Trump's aggressive deportation plan. Trump told reporters that the center will be used to house particularly "menacing" undocumented migrants. "Some of the most vicious people on the planet," Trump said. "We're surrounded by miles of treacherous swampland, and the only way out is really deportation."
DeSantis has volunteered to deputize Florida National Guard judge advocates to serve as immigration judges in an effort to speed up the deportation process. Noem said she hopes other states follow Florida's lead.
A controversial project: Protestors stood outside the entrance of the detention center, with some condemning the aggressive behavior of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and others calling for a thorough environmental review of the site. Former Republican Rep. David Jolly, who is now running for Florida governor as a Democrat, called the construction of the facility in the middle of the Everglades a "callous political stunt." Other critics have charged that Trump's deportation plan feels authoritarian and undemocratic.
But there are plenty of supporters, too. One Trump fan welcomed the president with a sign reading, "Castrate Terrorists Rioters / Deport Illegals." Prominent Republicans and conservative media personalities celebrated the creation of the facility, with Jesse Watters of Fox News warning a fictitious "Jose" that he better be able to swim as fast as an Olympic champion if he tries to escape. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich told Watters that the detention center is needed, and perhaps only half-jokingly said Trump's next move would likely be a polar bear prison somewhere north of the Arctic Circle.
Trump did little to ease the concerns of his critics as he sang the praises of the facility and its location in a dangerous swamp, and suggested that he may push his deportation plan into new and untested territory by taking aim at U.S. citizens. "We also have a lot of bad people that have been here for a long time ... many of them were born in our country," Trump told reporters. "I think we ought to get them the hell out of here, too, if you want to know the truth. So maybe that'll be the next job that we'll work on together."
Fiscal News Roundup
- Senate Republicans Shock the House With a Supercharged Megabill – Politico
- Trump Reiterates July 4th Megabill Deadline – Politico
- Johnson on the Megabill: 'I'm Not Happy With What the Senate Did to Our Product' – Politico
- House Conservatives Threaten Floor Revolt Over Trump Megabill – The Hill
- What Made the Cut in Senate's Nearly 1,000-Page Policy Megabill? – The Hill
- At Least 17 Million Americans Would Lose Insurance Under Trump Plan – Washington Post
- Richest 20% Get an Average $6,055 Income Boost in Trump Tax Bill – Bloomberg
- Florida Says "Alligator Alcatraz" Is Temporary. Trump Isn't So Sure – Axios
- Rubio Hails End of USAID as Study Says Its Elimination Could Contribute to 14 Million Deaths in Next 5 Years – CNN
- 'No Alternative Funding Sources': Trump's Stifling of Disaster Aid Leaves Cities Adrift – Politico
- States Sue Trump Administration Over $1B Cut to School Mental Health Grants – Washington Post
- 'Sense of Doom': Morale Plunges as Some VA Health Workers Fear Worsening Shortages, Staffing Cuts – CNN
- Federal Judge Finds HHS Mass Layoffs Likely Unlawful – The Hill
- Powell Says the Fed Would Have Cut Rates This Year if It Weren't for Tariffs – CNN
- Trump Administration Plans to Move FBI to the D.C. Building That Housed USAID – Washington Post
- Trump Says DOGE Is a Monster That May 'Go Back and Eat Elon' – CNN
Views and Analysis
- Republican Bill Puts Nation on New, More Perilous Fiscal Path – Andrew Duehren, New York Times
- Poorest Americans Dealt Biggest Blow Under Senate Republican Tax Package – Tony Romm, New York Times
- Senate Passes Megabill as Murkowski Stays Bought – David Dayen, American Prospect
- What the GOP's Tax Bill Means for Your Health Care – Paige Winfield Cunningham and Yasmeen Abutaleb, Washington Post
- How Trump's Big Bill Could Leave States Scrambling to Cover Federal Funding Cuts – David A. Lieb, Associated Press
- The GOP's Big, Fat Warning Sign to the Bond Market – Catherine Rampell, Washington Post
- The Great Budget Baseline Con – Wall Street Journal Editorial Board
- Trump May Get His 'Big Beautiful Bill,' but the G.O.P. Will Pay a Price – Michelle Cottle and David Leonhardt, New York Times
- Trump's True Colors, Revealed – Thomas B. Edsall, New York Times
- The Big Beautiful Bill Is Being Enacted in an Ugly Way – Perry Bacon Jr., Washington Post
- Trump's Visit to a Migrant Camp Called 'Alligator Alcatraz' Stirs Dark Echoes – Stephen Collinson, CNN
- Social Security Offices Brace for Birthright Ruling Fallout – Whitney Curry Wimbish, American Prospect
- There's a Race to Power the Future. China Is Pulling Away – David Gelles, Somini Sengupta, Keith Bradsher and Brad Plumer, New York Times