the sun malaysia ipaper logo 150x150
Monday, June 22, 2026
22.1 C
Malaysia
the sun malaysia ipaper logo 150x150

US House Republicans face divide as they look to move ahead on Trump tax cuts

WASHINGTON: Top Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives plan to move forward this week on President Donald Trump’s tax cuts, but their caucus is divided with some members concerned that there are insufficient spending cuts in the budget blueprint passed by the Senate.

There is broad agreement within the party about extending President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, and funding other elements of Trump’s agenda including new immigration enforcement and military spending. But a divide remains on how to pay for a measure that nonpartisan budget analysts say will add about $5.7 trillion to the nation’s debt over the next decade.

Deficit hawks, particularly in the House, are pushing for about $2 trillion in spending cuts over that time period. House Democrats and public health and anti-poverty advocates say that goal will be hard to reach without cutting deeply into the Medicaid program for low-income Americans and those with disabilities.

Further complicating matters is last week’s brutal stock market selloff, which followed Trump’s move to impose sweeping new tariffs on imported goods. Economists predict those measures will push prices higher and could trigger a recession.

Like the Senate’s Saturday morning 51-48 vote to pass its version of the budget resolution, the tax cuts legislation will use a special budget process — reconciliation — which will allow it to bypass the chamber’s normal 60-vote threshold for most legislation.

Some House Republicans raised questions as to whether the Senate measure stipulates enough spending cuts. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, an outside, nonpartisan think tank, calculated the different plans and found the Senate option required only 0.2% as much in budget cuts as the House resolution.

The top Republican on the House Budget Committee, Representative Jodey Arrington of Texas, said in a statement the Senate’s approach to spending cuts was “unserious and disappointing.”

The think tank also said the Senate plan allows for twice as much borrowing compared to the House’s version.

A House vote is expected this week on the budget process, but in order for it to be successful, the lower chamber must rectify changes between the Senate’s approach and the House version that was passed in February.

Other fiscal hawks in the House piled on and bristled at the Senate’s stipulated lower level of spending cuts in the resolution, as well as Senate Republicans’ $1 trillion higher cap to increase the debt limit.

Representative Andy Harris from Maryland, head of the conservative Freedom Caucus, said in a social media post he was “unconvinced” about the Senate’s commitment to spending cuts.

“I can’t support House passage of the Senate changes to our budget resolution until I see the actual spending and deficit reduction plans to enact President Trump’s America First agenda,“ Harris said.

The Senate measure would also raise the nation’s debt ceiling by $5 trillion, a higher hike than the House provided in its version. Congress will need to address its self-imposed borrowing limit by sometime this summer or risk defaulting on $36.6 trillion in debt.

In a letter to colleagues, Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson and members of his leadership team pushed for passage.

The letter said that to secure passage in the House, “the final reconciliation bill must include historic spending reductions while protecting essential programs.”

MEDICAID CONCERN

Senator Josh Hawley, a Republican from Missouri, told reporters that Trump last week gave him an “unequivocal” promise that Medicaid benefits would not be slashed.

This would mean House Republicans would have to change their plans, as their conference is looking for $2 trillion in spending cuts, in part by overhauling Medicaid and food assistance programs and by eliminating popular environmental policies.

House Democrats objected to the proposed spending cuts.

“Children will be devastated. Women will be devastated. Older Americans will be devastated. Everyday Americans with disabilities are going to be devastated. Hospitals and nursing homes and community health clinics are going to close,“ House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said on MSNBC’s The Weekend about such Medicaid cuts.

Some of the spending differences between the House and the Senate come from a calculation twist that Republican senators have adopted. They assert the cost of implementing the Trump agenda on taxes and other issues is several trillion dollars less than expected because it is an extension of the current Trump tax cuts from 2017.

The CRFB nonpartisan analysts argue the total cost of the 2017 tax cuts — which were passed on a temporary basis — would be $3.8 trillion alone. But that figure is factored out of the plans, so the think tank calls this accounting method a “gimmick” and “fiscally unprecedented.”

Republican Senator Bill Cassidy from Louisiana hinted in a floor speech this calculation tactic could create spending hurdles in the future. “It’s never been done before in a setting like this. I think it establishes a dangerous precedent,“ Cassidy said, before voting to move ahead, citing economic unease.

STAY AHEAD OF THE CURVE

Join our community for instant updates and exclusive content.

Join Telegram Channel

Related


spot_img

Latest News

The Third International Summit of Religious Leaders in Kuala Lumpur Calls for Youth Empowerment

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA - Media OutReach Newswire - 22 June 2026 - The Third International Summit of Religious Leaders 2026 concluded in Kuala Lumpur with the participation of His Excellency Sheikh Dr. Mohammed bin Abdulkarim Al-Issa, Secretary-General of the Muslim World League and Chairman of the Organization of Muslim Scholars.

UnionPay showcases innovations with 15 ecosystem partners at 2026 China International Financial Exhibition

UnionPay joined 15 ecosystem partners at the 2026 China International Financial Exhibition to showcase advances in global payments, cross-border QR interoperability, artificial intelligence, digital finance, and consumer growth solutions, highlighting its expanding international network and open fintech innovation ecosystem.

Ex-justice minister gets 25 years for S. Korea martial law role

A court sentenced ex-justice minister Park Sung-jae to 25 years for his role in Yoon Suk Yeol's 2024 martial law declaration.

Focus Graphite announces SEDAR+ filing of the NI 43-101 technical report with the updated...

Focus Graphite has filed an updated NI 43-101 technical report for its Lac Tetepisca Project in Quebec, outlining one of the world's largest identified graphite deposits with 120.2 million tonnes of indicated resources and significant expansion potential to support future battery-material supply chains.

Most Viewed

spot_img
WC26

World Cup 2026

Updates, Fixtures, Results & Standings