
Dozens arrested protesting GOP megabill
Capitol Police arrested 38 individuals in the Capitol Rotunda and an intersection nearby. Those taken into custody were charged with crowding, obstructing and incommoding, according to The Associated Press.
Law enforcement did not immediately respond to The Hill's request for comment on the matter.
Several organizations, including Repairers of the Breach, promoted the demonstrations as the first of 'Moral Mondays,' dedicated to railing against the Trump administration's efforts to cut federal spending and its robust crackdown on illegal immigration.
Those who gathered from the Poor People's Campaign, an economic justice organization, brought 51 caskets to symbolize the 51,000 deaths the group has estimated would come if Congress moves forward with its sweeping cuts to health care alone.
'The largest ever cuts to America's safety net were pushed through the House and the Senate without a single hearing for the people whose lives depend on these programs to testify,' Rev. William J. Barber II, co-chair of the Poor People's Campaign, wrote in a Monday Substack post.
Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) also joined protestors to hear their stories and speak on the potential impact of Republicans' spending and tax package.
'An honor to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with @RevDrBarber and @BRepairers to denounce the GOP's catastrophic tax bill on behalf of tens of millions of Americans who will lose Medicaid, SNAP benefits and other lifeline staples,' Raskin (D-Md.) wrote Monday in a post on social platform X following the gathering.
'Trump's tactics of disappearing people in America should terrify everyone who still cherishes democracy and freedom,' the Maryland lawmaker added in a later post. 'We reject this growing authoritarian assault.'
The arrests come as the Senate pulled an all-nighter vote-a-rama with the goal of moving the legislation — which is not final — forward.
The GOP can only afford to lose three votes in the upper chamber. Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine), Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) have already signaled they will not vote in favor of the megabill. With 50 votes, Vice President Vance can cast a tie-breaking vote.
If it clears the Senate, it will go back to the House. Lawmakers in the lower chamber have already voiced concerns over the changes made to its version, which was passed in May.
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OTTAWA—Call it a prudent climbdown, a show of weakness, or an unavoidable concession. There are several ways to look at Prime Minister Mark Carney's 11th-hour decision to cancel the federal government's Digital Services Tax last weekend. But what if it's also a tangible example of exactly what Carney warned would happen? The Liberal leader won a minority government on April 28 with a pitch that no one was better placed than himself to protect Canada from Donald Trump. The U.S. president has mused about using 'economic force' to annex Canada. As if taunting or teasing this country, he questions why it exists, and keeps floating the prospect of it becoming the '51st state' of the U.S. Two days before the election, Carney spelled out how he understood all of this. 'The U.S. is trying to put economic pressure on us to gain major concessions, to the extreme of a level of integration of our countries that would impinge our sovereignty,' Carney said that day in King City, north of Toronto. 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Yet there's a question of how much any deal can be relied upon, so long as Trump is in the White House, unilaterally imposing tariffs that Canada views as 'illegal' violations of the 2018 trade deal. 'Trump is arguing about supply management and the (Digital Services Tax), but it's the U.S. that is in flagrant breach of its trade obligations. It's abandoned the CUSMA, virtually behaving as if it did not exist and the U.S. signature has no meaning,' Herman said. 'So we are in a world where rules and the rules-based system, and the stability that that treaty was supposed to provide, have gone by the board.' That means, at least for now, the Carney government is operating in a world where Canada's foremost ally, the colossus to the south, will use economic force to get what it wants.