logo
Americans weigh in on Trump's 'big, beautiful bill': polls

Americans weigh in on Trump's 'big, beautiful bill': polls

Fox Newsa day ago
President Donald Trump is cheering on the GOP's landmark spending and tax cut bill, as it faces judgment day in the Senate.
"ONE GREAT BIG BEAUTIFUL BILL, is moving along nicely!" the president wrote in a social media post hours before the Senate on Monday began to take a slew of votes on the Republican-crafted measure.
The bill, which the president is insisting pass Congress and reach his desk by this Friday, July 4, is stuffed full of Trump's campaign trail promises and second-term priorities on tax cuts, immigration, defense, energy and the debt limit.
It includes extending his signature 2017 tax cuts and eliminating taxes on tips and overtime pay, providing billions for border security and codifying his controversial immigration crackdown.
However, many of the latest national surveys indicate that Americans are far from thrilled with the measure.
By a 21-point margin, voters questioned in the most recent Fox News national poll opposed the federal budget legislation (38% favored vs. 59% opposed), which passed by the House of Representatives by just one vote last month.
The bill was also underwater in national surveys conducted this month by the Washington Post (minus 19 points), Pew Research (minus 20 points) and Quinnipiac University (minus 26 points).
As Democrats attack the bill, they're highlighting the GOP's proposed restructuring of Medicaid — the nearly 60-year-old federal program that provides health coverage to roughly 71 million low-income Americans. Additionally, Senate Republicans increased cuts to Medicaid over what the House passed.
The changes to Medicaid, as well as cuts to food stamps, another one of the nation's major safety net programs, were drafted in part as an offset to pay for extending Trump's 2017 tax cuts, which are set to expire later this year. The measure includes a slew of new rules and regulations, including work requirements for many of those seeking Medicaid coverage.
Meanwhile, Republicans criticize Democrats opposing the bill for voting to increase taxes on most Americans.
About half of respondents questioned in the Fox News poll said the bill would hurt their family (49%), while one quarter thought it would help (23%), and another quarter didn't think it would make a difference (26%).
Sixty percent felt they had a good understanding of what is in the measure, formally known as the One, Big, Beautiful Bill, and while those voters were more likely to favor the legislation than those who are unfamiliar with it, more still think it will hurt rather than help their family (45% vs. 34%).
The latest surveys all indicate a wide partisan divide over the measure.
According to the Fox News poll, which was conducted June 13-16, nearly three-quarters of Republicans (73%) favored the bill, while nearly nine in ten Democrats (89%) and nearly three-quarters of independents (73%) opposed the measure.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Senate GOP races to vote on Trump's agenda bill as Thune confirms deal with holdouts to cap record-breaking session
Senate GOP races to vote on Trump's agenda bill as Thune confirms deal with holdouts to cap record-breaking session

CNN

time10 minutes ago

  • CNN

Senate GOP races to vote on Trump's agenda bill as Thune confirms deal with holdouts to cap record-breaking session

Senate Republicans are hurtling toward a final vote on President Donald Trump's agenda bill after more than 24 hours of painstaking negotiations on changes to the package to win over key GOP support. 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.

US job openings in May hit 7.8 million in a continuing display of labor market resilience
US job openings in May hit 7.8 million in a continuing display of labor market resilience

Washington Post

time11 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

US job openings in May hit 7.8 million in a continuing display of labor market resilience

WASHINGTON — U.S. job openings rose unexpectedly in May, a sign that the American labor market remains resilien t in the face of high borrowing costs and uncertainty over U.S. economic policy. U.S. employers posted 7.8 million vacancies in May, The Labor Department reported Tuesday, up from 7.4 million in April. Economists had expected a slight decrease to 7.3 million. Openings were reported at hotels and restaurants and at finance companies. Vacancies at the federal government fell to the lowest level since May 2020, likely reflecting President Donald Trump's hiring freeze .

Vaughn Hillyard To Join MSNBC As Network Taps Additional Correspondents In Advance Of Split From Comcast
Vaughn Hillyard To Join MSNBC As Network Taps Additional Correspondents In Advance Of Split From Comcast

Yahoo

time12 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Vaughn Hillyard To Join MSNBC As Network Taps Additional Correspondents In Advance Of Split From Comcast

Vaughn Hillyard will join MSNBC as senior White House correspondent, as the network has hired a group of journalists for its team in advance of its split from Comcast and sister network NBC News. Hillyard has been an NBC News White House correspondent but has contributed to MSNBC. More from Deadline Senate Strikes AI Moratorium From Donald Trump's "Big, Beautiful Bill" Donald Trump Talks Of Deporting Elon Musk And Unleashing DOGE On Him: "We'll Have To Take A Look" Senator Backs Away From Compromise Over AI Moratorium In Trump's "Big, Beautiful Bill" - Update Also joining MSNBC will be Laura Barrón-López as White House correspondent, David Noriega as MSNBC correspondent, and Marc Santia as an investigative correspondent. The split, expected to be completed later this year, has left questions of who will go where. Figures like Andrea Mitchell and José Díaz-Balart are staying with NBC News, while figures like Ken Dilanian are landing at MSNBC. MSNBC will be part of Versant, the newly branded entity of cable networks and other media properties formerly owned by Comcast. With NBC News no longer a sister network, MSNBC is building up its own news division. Hillyard has covered three presidential elections for the network, and landed interviews with figures like Steve Bannon, just before he served a four-month prison sentence. Hillyard also interviewed Vice President Mike Pence in 2018 following the Pittsburgh Tree of Life Synagogue shooting, among other high profile assignments. Barrón-López was White House correspondent for PBS NewsHour and a CNN political analyst. She also covered the Biden administration for Politico, and was part of the PBS team that won a Peabody for coverage of the Israel-Hamas war. Noriega will be based in Los Angeles. He was a national correspondent for NBC News and reported across the country and internationall on issues including migration. He received an Edward R. Murrow Award for his reporting from Mexico. Santia was a reporter on criminal justice, security issues and investigations for NBC4 in New York since 2012. He's covered national stories, including mass shootings and natural disasters, and won a regional Murrow award for a story on a former United Airlines flight attendant who honored friends and coworkers lost in the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks. Best of Deadline 'Poker Face' Season 2 Guest Stars: From Katie Holmes To Simon Hellberg Everything We Know About 'The Devil Wears Prada 2' 2025 TV Series Renewals: Photo Gallery

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store