
GOP holdouts noncommittal on how they'll vote on Trump megabill
Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine), a key moderate, wouldn't say Monday afternoon when pressed how she plans to vote for the megabill, but has had concerns about Medicaid cuts, among other changes.
'I'm voting on the amendments, looking at the amendments. I'm not going to make an announcement now,' she told The Hill. She also has an amendment to increase the rural hospital fund.
Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisc.) was also noncommittal when asked about how he plans to vote on the final passage on Monday afternoon — just hours before the Senate is expected to vote on sending the overall legislation to the House for consideration.
Asked whether he'd support the plan, he urged the adoption of an amendment being pushed by Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) aimed at further reducing Medicaid spending by limiting its expansion under the Affordable Care Act.
Lee and Johnson are cosponsors of the amendment, along with Senate Finance Committee Chair Mike Crapo (R-Idaho).
'By the way, almost everybody in this chamber, Republicans, said they were going to repeal and replace Obamacare,' Johnson told The Hill. 'Well, this would be repealing probably one of the most damaging aspects of Obamacare.'
But when pressed twice whether he could support the bill if the amendment is not adopted, Johnson added, 'I don't think the House will. I want to pass something the Senate, the House can pass.'
'Okay, so again, this might take a little time.'
Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) also said he was planning to support the bill but told The Hill that it depends on how the bill shakes out.
'Obviously it depends on how it all turns out, but yes I am,' he told The Hill when asked if he plans to support the bill. Asked about whether it also depended on Scott's amendment, which seeks to trim an additional $313 billion in Medicaid spending, passing: 'Depends on what the finished product looks like.'
Johnson drew attention over the weekend after initially voting against proceeding to debate for the megabill before flipping his vote after he and other hardline conservatives struck a deal with Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) and Vice President Vance.
Johnson said the leadership agreed at the time to allow a vote on their amendment.
'The leadership wants to do this, too. This is what was key about the two-hour meeting with the president,' he said then, adding Trump is 'willing to do what needs to be done to put this nation on a path of eventually balancing our budget.'
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In a three-year pilot program, every American baby born between 2025 and 2028 would get a $1,000 nest egg from the government to be invested in an index fund. Parents could then add $5,000 each year to those accounts and watch the interest grow during childhood. No deductions would be allowed until the child turns 18. Originally called a 'baby bonus,' or a 'MAGA account,' the name was changed to 'Trump accounts' over the course of this year. It bears some similarities to proposals put forward by Democrats, including Sen. Cory Booker. Read more from CNN's Jeanne Sahadi. Many workers who receive tips or overtime compensation would get a tax break through 2028. Employees who work in jobs that traditionally receive tips could deduct up to $25,000 in tip income from their federal income taxes, while workers who receive overtime could deduct up to $12,500 of that extra pay. Highly compensated individuals who make more than $160,000 in 2025 would not qualify. 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These folks would receive an average tax cut of $12,500, or 3.4% of their after-tax income, in 2026, the analysis found. But the lowest-income households, who earn about $35,000 or less, would receive an average tax cut of only $150, less than 1% of their after-tax income. Middle-income households would see their taxes reduced by about $1,800, or 2.3% of their after-tax income, on average. This analysis does not take into account the historic cuts to the nation's safety-net program, which would hurt lower-income Americans. They would see their income reduced after factoring in the changes to Medicaid and food stamps, according to a report from the Budget Lab at Yale. It's hard to believe, but according to a Congressional Research Service report, thousands of people who made $1 million or more claimed unemployment benefits in 2021 and 2022. This bill puts an end to that. Musk is furious about the bill and howling about it on social media. 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