Senate GOP races to vote on Trump's agenda bill as Thune confirms deal with holdouts to cap record-breaking session
After hours of stalemate, Senate GOP leaders are now pushing toward their final set of votes in hopes of passing the multi-trillion-dollar bill out of their chamber in the next few hours. The legislation would lower federal taxes and infuse more money into the Pentagon and border security agencies, while downsizing government safety-net programs including Medicaid.
Asked if GOP leaders had a deal to move ahead, Senate Majority Leader John Thune told reporters Tuesday morning, 'I believe we do.' He added: 'I'm of Scandinavian heritage. Always a bit of a realist. So we'll see what happens.'
Republican Sen. John Hoeven of North Dakota said Vice President JD Vance – who arrived on Capitol Hill earlier Tuesday morning – is expected to cast a tie-breaking vote on several final changes to the legislation, including the massive package of negotiated changes from Senate GOP leadership known as the 'substitute' amendment.
'We'll need him on the actual substitute bill,' Hoeven said of Vance.
The burst of movement from the Senate GOP comes after a full 24 hours of intense negotiating between Thune, Vance and the GOP holdouts, including Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska.
Vance had been the latest senior Republican to try to personally woo Murkowski, one of the party's critical holdouts, to back the giant package of tax and spending cuts. GOP leaders have spent days intensely lobbying the Alaska centrist with a lineup of policy sweeteners catered specifically to her state.
On Tuesday, she suggested they finally reached a deal.
'It's in the hands of the people that operate the copy machine,' Murkowski told reporters when asked whether the vote was in the hands of the Senate parliamentarian.
Earlier, the parliamentarian – the chamber rules referee – determined that a food stamps-related carveout meant to win over Murkowski could remain in the legislation without running afoul of the chamber's strict budget rules, while ruling that a provision meant to change federal cost sharing for Medicaid to benefit states like Alaska and Hawaii was not compliant, according to a Democratic source familiar with the ruling.
Thune and his leadership team spent the weekend pushing ahead with Trump's agenda, though they didn't yet have the votes. Now, their chamber has been voting on amendments to Trump's bill for a full day — an unprecedented session that has frustrated Republicans and Democrats alike.
And it's not even the final step before Trump can sign the bill: The narrowly divided House will need to pass the Senate's exact version of the bill, though dozens of their own members dislike the bill. House GOP leadership have been privately telegraphing to the Senate for weeks that they should have simply adopted the House version — rather than largely rewritten it.
Still, if the Senate passes its version Tuesday, the House is expected to vote Wednesday on the measure, according to a GOP leadership source familiar with the plans.
It's a rapid turnaround for House lawmakers, who are currently scattered across the country for the holiday recess, but multiple GOP sources said they believed they could get it done in the House this week and meet the president's end-of-week deadline.
Both Thune and House Speaker Mike Johnson have been working furiously to deliver Trump his first major legislative win this week, so the president can sign it in a special ceremony on the Fourth of July.
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