By Ryan King and Victor Nava. Media: Nypost
Bleary-eyed House Republicans advanced the One Big Beautiful Bill Act past the Rules Committee after a marathon hearing Wednesday, overcoming the final committee hurdle needed to bring it up for a floor vote.
In an 8-4 vote shortly before 11 p.m., the colossal legislation cleared the GOP-led committee along party lines.
The panel convened at 1 a.m. Wednesday to consider the measure due to requirements that Democrats get two days to file minority views.
A “Manager’s Amendment” making last-minute tweaks to the mammoth bill — including a provision cementing a deal to increase the state and local tax (SALT) deductions cap by 400% — was unveiled to the committee after more than 20 hours of debate.

In an 8-4 vote shortly before 11 p.m., the colossal legislation cleared the GOP-led committee along party lines.
The panel convened at 1 a.m. Wednesday to consider the measure due to requirements that Democrats get two days to file minority views.
A “Manager’s Amendment” making last-minute tweaks to the mammoth bill — including a provision cementing a deal to increase the state and local tax (SALT) deductions cap by 400% — was unveiled to the committee after more than 20 hours of debate.
More than 500 amendments introduced by Democrats were rejected over the course of the punishingly drawn-out hearing.
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has been hoping to push the megabill through the House by Memorial Day before the lower chamber breaks for a one-week recess next week, but is still grappling with multiple holdouts and a razor-thin margin.
The Rules Committee’s approval means the legislative bundle only needs a simple majority to clear the House, rather than a two-thirds majority if leadership were forced to bypass the gatekeeping committee.
Still, Republicans can only afford to lose three votes at most if there’s full attendance, given their 220-212 majority.
To get to President Trump’s desk, the measure will also have to clear the Senate and has been specifically designed to take advantage of the upper chamber’s reconciliation process, enabling it to bypass a Democratic filibuster, which requires 60 votes to overcome.

AP
Several senators, such as Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), have voiced opposition to the measure in its current form. Republicans have a 53-47 majority in the Senate.
Trump met with House Republicans at the Capitol on Tuesday in a bid to pressure them to get the monster bill over the finish line and commended Johnson for his efforts to build consensus around it.
“It’s not a question of holdouts, we have a tremendously unified party,” Trump told reporters about the chances of getting the votes. “I don’t think we’ve ever had a party like this. There are some people that want a couple of things that maybe I don’t like or they’re not going to get.”

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The One Big Beautiful Bill Act is intended to be Trump’s signature legislative achievement of the year and possibly his second term in office, serving as an “everything bill” of sorts for conservative wishlist policy items.
It features an extension of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, no taxes on tips, no taxes on overtime pay, a barrage of spending cuts, beefed-up border security, bolstered defense spending and energy policy reforms.
Here are the highlights of what’s inside the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act”:
Modifications in the 42-page Manager’s Amendment renamed “MAGA” savings accounts for children to “Trump” accounts; removed silencers from the National Firearms Act of 1934; eliminated language that would sell public lands in Nevada and Utah; moved to implement Medicaid work requirements from Jan. 1, 2029, to “no later than December 31, 2026” or earlier; and set up a $12 billion program to reimburse states for assisting with border security since January 2021, among other changes.
Throughout the drafting of the bill, there have been some major hang-ups for Republicans: the SALT cap, the timeline for implementing the Medicaid work requirements, adjustments to Medicaid’s reimbursements for states and the megabill’s impact on the deficit.
Fiscal hawks and blue-state, moderate Republicans have been at loggerheads over some of those issues for months.
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