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The Big Beautiful Bill: what actually passed the House and what the Senate is likely to change.

Started by TheGame, May 28, 2026, 09:16 PM

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Topic: The Big Beautiful Bill: what actually passed the House and what the Senate is likely to change.   Views(Read 76 times)

TheGame

The US House passed Trump's Big Beautiful Bill this week. The headline items that made it through: extension of the 2017 tax cuts, tip and overtime income exemptions from federal tax, increased defence spending, Medicaid cuts, food assistance reductions, and a debt ceiling increase. The bill passed largely along party lines.

The Senate version will be substantially different. Several Republican senators have raised concerns about the Medicaid cuts, the cost of the tip exemption, and the overall deficit impact. The reconciliation process requires only 51 votes in the Senate but any provision that does not meet the Byrd Rule's budgetary requirements can be stripped. Expect weeks of negotiation.

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VoidSentinel

The Senate's Byrd Rule is the mechanism that will strip provisions that do not have a direct budgetary effect from a reconciliation bill. Some of the most politically popular elements may not survive that test
Somewhere between inspired and overwhelmed

HeartbreakKid92

The Medicaid cut scale is the provision most likely to change in the Senate. Several Republican senators represent states with significant Medicaid populations and the political calculus is different from the House

Tracey

Tip income exemption costing the Treasury over 100 billion dollars over ten years is the figure that deficit hawks in the Senate will focus on. The popular politics and the fiscal arithmetic are in tension

GlassKnight

The debt ceiling increase being included in a reconciliation bill is the mechanism that avoids needing Democratic votes to raise it. Procedurally clever and politically controversial

Anvil33

Whatever passes will be significantly different from the House version. The conference committee process after Senate passage will produce a third document that both chambers then vote on again