Trump, Beautiful Bill 201
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Washington — President Trump brought pomp and circumstance to his signing of the " big, beautiful bill " on Friday, with an Independence Day ceremony at the White House that included a B-2 bomber flyover.
The GOP-led House of Representatives passed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act in a 218-214 vote Thursday following 29 hours of arm-twisting and deliberation that included the longest floor speech and longest procedural vote in the body’s 236-year history.
Republicans and Democrats have been arguing for months about the pros and cons of President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBB), signed into law on July 4 after squeaking through Congress.
President Trump called the legislation the "ultimate codification of our agenda" to "make America great again."
Low-income green card holders still within the mandatory five-year waiting period for Medicaid would be among those most affected.
The Congressional Budget Office estimated that it will add $3.3 trillion to the deficit over the next ten years. Elon Musk, once Trump’s highest profile ally, has warned again in recent days that the legislation would send the country into “debt slavery.” He also threatened to fund primary challengers to Republicans who voted for the legislation.
President Donald Trump signed into law House Resolution 1, which he called "One Big, Beautiful Bill," while hosting a military family picnic event at the White House on Friday evening.
The “big, beautiful bill” is heading to President Trump’s desk. House Republicans passed the core of Trump’s domestic policy agenda Thursday afternoon — including sweeping tax cuts, a crackdown on
The White House press secretary was asked by a reporter if President Trump will sign a final bill that includes Medicaid cuts.
President Trump is celebrating this July 4th by signing his budget plan, the so-called “Big, Beautiful Bill,” into law.
President Donald Trump signed his mammoth domestic policy bill into law, securing a major legislative win by his July Fourth target date.
What the bill does do is provide a temporary tax deduction of up to $6,000 for seniors aged 65 and older. The tax break is available to people with an adjusted gross incomes of $75,000 or less and $150,000 or less for couples filing jointly. The deduction is set to expire in at the end of 2028.