JD Vance breaks Senate tie at $ 9 billion in trump cut
Fox News’s senior Congress correspondent Chad Paragram reported on Vice President JD Vance, breaking a Senate tie on the ‘Clavc’ bill of President Donald Trump, as is expected to vote on the package again from the Senate.
NewNow you can hear Fox News article!
Vice President JD Vance postponed the gospel of President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” at Peachtri City, Georgia – and continued to take shots on those who opposed this remedy.
After a visit to Georgia to Vance, he has visited several major districts across the country and appreciated the “big, beautiful bill”, while Republicans want to preserve their slim house majority and potentially raise some seats in a high-day 2026 mid-term elections.
The domestic policy bill included Trump’s major provisions for permanently establishing individual and commercial tax brakes included in Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, and included new tax deductions to cut duties on tips and overtime.
Ahead of 2026 Midatories warns ‘penalty’ for Dames opposing ‘big, beautiful bill’
Vice President JD Vance postponed the gospel of President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” at Peachtri City, Georgia – and continued to take shots on those who opposed this remedy.
“If you are working hard every single day in the United States every single day, or if you are making a business here in the United States, then you should have a tax code that rewards you instead of rewarding you,” Vance said on Thursday. “And this happened when we passed the working families and cut the cut just a few months ago.”
All the Democrats and five Republicans in both the House and the Senate voted against the measurement on a large scale – including Georgia’s Democratic Sen John Osoff. However, Trump signed the law on 4 July. As a result, Vance targeted Ossoff during his journey.
“While John Osoff pretended to be a liberal when he came to Atlanta, he is a distant liberal in Washington, DC, and it’s the only place that is really counted if you are a senator of the United States,” Vance said. “So why don’t we ask John Osoff, why did you vote to increase taxes? Why did you vote for the illegal aliens on the Medicade? Why did you vote to insolvent Medicare?”
In July, Vance visited Canton, Ohio, and said that whoever opposed the “big, beautiful bill”, should face the results before the mid -term elections of 2026. Ohio was the rape Emilia Cyx among those who voted against the remedy, who represent the city.
Vance said on 28 July, “Whoever voted against it, I think they should pay a fine.”
Trump indicated the ‘big, beautiful’ bill in a broader victory for the second term agenda, to overcome Dames and GOP rebels
Vice President JD Vance toured the Metals plant at Canton, Ohio, 28 July, 2025.
Vance faces a similar position in Georgia, where Ossoff has criticized the measurement and is ready to reunite in 2026. Critics of Trump’s tax and domestic policy measures have indicated the medicade and SNAP reforms included in the bill, suggesting the report that millions of beneficiaries will be removed from the programs.
Meanwhile, a spokesperson of Ossoff referred to Fox News Digital for Senator’s comments at a press conference on Thursday, where he cited a local news report claiming that the CEO of Georgia Hospital said that he should cut millions from his budget due to Trump’s bill.
JD VANC
Sen.jon Ossoff, D-Ga., President Joe Biden at Pulman Yards in Atlanta, Georgia on 9 March 2024 at a campaign program for Biden. (Photo by Megan Warner/Getty Image)
Ossoff said, “I think it is shameful for the Vice President to sell a policy to come to Georgia, resulting in damage to hospitals in Georgia state already, which is expected to throw more than 100,000 people from health care in Georgia state.” “This week, the Evans Memorial Hospital in South -East Georgia said that due to the bill that the vice -presidents are for rescue, they are going to have a financial hole of $ 3.5 million next year. The hospital here in Georgia is now warning that he may have to cut the ICU.”
In a Fox News Poll released in July, most of the voters were opposed to the “big, beautiful bill”. The polls held between July 18 and July 21 found that 58% of all registered voters oppose measures, while 39% have approved it.
No Democrats supported the “big, beautiful bill” with the Republican sensor. Men’s Susan Colins, Thom Tilis of Northern Carolina and Rand Paul of Kentaki, and Republican Reps.