NewNow you can hear Fox News article!
The Senate Republican left Washington this week to sell President Donald Trump’s “Big, Beautiful Bill”, but began only one and a half years ago.
Trump’s $ 3.3 trillion megabils, with their legislative priorities on border security, defense and energy, were a product month. And it was the Marki policy in the bill, which was to make or make many of the 2017 tax deduction and make many of the jobs permanent or permanent, it was the inspiring power behind the Republican’s desire to pass it.
But the Senate Republican has very little time to comfort his laurel and celebrate the passage of the bill, since Trump signed a $ 9 billion clobac package and tried to ram through the blockade of the President’s nominee people nominees.
After marathon vote-e-Ram, Senate passes Trump’s ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’
President Donald Trump Board Air Force One on July 25, 2025 for Scotland in Andrews, Maryland. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
The journey of passing the bill began well before being a triafeca in Washington in Republican in early 2024, when the then-C-Senet Republican Conference President John Bairaso, R-YO, hosted a policy retreat with the Senate Republican, who could like to win in November.
And months later, Trump visited with the Senate Republican to discuss the strategy they were working back and forth.
“With President Trump at the White House, we discussed how Republican would take the US back on track,” Bairaso said at that time. “It begins with families helping to avoid the pain of Democrats high prices, highlight American energy, prevents the increase in democrats, and protects the southern border. Republicans are united.”
In January, the work of real, nitty-gritty began, where the concepts were taken and included in the law.
Senate majority leader John ThunThis added pressure on the Republican to the Republican in the lower chamber to level its own plan.
For the first part of this year, however, the Senate was waiting for a fine-dhun at home and passing his version of the bill. Nevertheless, the theun and their leadership team, which includes Sen Markwene Mulin, R-Ocla, worked to get one product from one side of the building to one product, with which the Senate could work with GOP.
Trump’s ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’ faced the Republican Family Fuud as Senate revealed its final text
Reporter surrounds the Senate majority leader John Theun as he moves between his office and the Senate Chamber at US Capital on August 1, 2025 in Washington. (Chip Somodeville/Getty Images)
And when Bill made its way for the upper chamber in early June, Trip was under pressure to give a finished product till 4 July, an artificial time frame was used to help coral MPs to work on the bill.
Before the bill was on the nature of the deduction before hitting one from the floor, one of the large disagreements in the upper chamber, especially for the purpose of the provider tax rate. The issue was eventually smooth through the construction of the funds of $ 50 billion rural hospitals, but MPs vowed to ensure that the changes in the provider would never be effective.
“I think it was a very big mistake,” Sen Josh Hale, R-Mo., said at that time. “I think it has been an unhappy episode here in the Congress, this attempt to cut the Medicid.”
“And I think, clearly, my party needs to do some soul-fasting,” he continued. “If you want to become a working class party, you have to distribute to the working class people. You can’t take health care from working people.”
And when the bill finally hit the floor, which would develop in a multi-day round of procedural obstacles, Senate Minority Leaders Chak Shumar, DNY., The entire bill read and a marathon vote-e-Ram, Senate Republican were still not fully on board.
First, Sen Ron Johnson, R-Vice, and Sen Rick Scott, led by R-Flad, appeared to not support the package-they wanted to cut the Medicid even more deeply, which the federal government paid for healthcare in the states, which was selected in Obamacair,
They were offered an amendment that never finally came to the floor, but was enough to back down the bill. And their resistance began in the first of the handle of the handle inside the thumb office outside the Senate floor.
Tax deduction, work requirements and asylum fees: What is inside the Senate version of Trump’s Bill here
Republican Sen Thom Tilis of Northern Carolina announced in June that she would not run for a third term in the Senate when she is ready for re -election in 2026. (Getty image)
Sen Synthia Lumis, R-EO., He joined him for a closed door conversation, and told Fox News Digital that while his vote was not accidental to add change, she wanted to make the case why it should happen.
“It saved a lot of money,” he said. “It saved a lot of money, and so I was eager to use us the opportunity, because we were able to open mandatory expenses, in fact use the opportunity to save some money.”
And later, in the hours of night’s wee, the Republican was jumping on the floor of the Senate from the office’s office, excluding deals as they went to support Sen Lisa Murkovski, R-Lalaska, Bill, knowing that Sense. Susan could vote against Colins, R-Main, and Thom Tilis, RNC.
“Sometimes it is placed on a clock, as the argument has to be finished at some point,” Mulin told Fox News Digital. “And that’s why we had to do some of it on the floor. We had to do it, we had to force the hand.”
Click here to get Fox News app
And finally, only three Republicans, Kentaki’s Rand Paul, Collins and Tilis voted against the bill. From there it went to the House, where Republican held its dramatic rally to pass legislative Bhamoth in the lower room.
And now, as Republicans are scattered to their home states to sell their components bills, Tilis said that the “founder” piece of information that the legalists can share is that they postponed a nationwide growth.
“The shame of the Medicade provision is that the vast majority of the bill are supported,” he told Fox News Digital. “I think we have to remind them that the problem with the tax bill is that they are not seeing a cut, but if we have not done this, they would have seen a historic growth.”
“So we need to remind them that what we are doing continues that we started, and the economy we created were able to face Kovid,” he continued. “And I strongly believe that if we don’t pass it. We were in a different posture.”