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White House pushes “big, beautiful bill” as GOP faces roadblocks in Senate

by Kaia Hubbard
June 26, 2025
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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White House pushes “big, beautiful bill” as GOP faces roadblocks in Senate

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Washington — The White House made a push for the centerpiece legislation of President Trump’s second term, hosting “One, Big, Beautiful Event” on Thursday, highlighting the bill amid intraparty disagreements and roadblocks in the Senate as lawmakers near a Fourth of July deadline. 

After the House narrowly approved the legislation that addresses the president’s tax, defense, border and energy priorities last month, Senate GOP leaders are working to pass the bill in the upper chamber. The bill would then be sent back to the House to approve the changes before it can reach Mr. Trump’s desk for his signature. But the self-imposed July 4 deadline looms large over the effort, with key disagreements remaining.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt met with House Republicans on the conservative Republican Study Committee on Wednesday and told reporters that the administration is working to “make sure everyone understands this bill needs to be back on the president’s desk by July 4.”

“The White House and the president have been consistently engaged in this process since the very beginning, both on the House side and on the Senate side,” Leavitt said, adding that Mr. Trump “is always willing to make calls, and we’re going to get this bill done.”

But as the deadline approaches, Republicans in Congress have squabbled over key provisions in the legislation, like Medicaid restrictions used to pay for the bill’s new spending. 

Shortly before the president’s afternoon event, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he’s asking Congress to remove a tax provision that targets dividends, royalties, interest and business profits earned by individuals and institutions abroad. Complying with Bessent’s request would make the legislation more expensive. 

Senate Republicans have proposed steeper cuts to Medicaid funding in part by lowering provider taxes — which states use to help fund their share of Medicaid costs — from 6% to 3.5% by 2031. The House sought to lower federal costs by freezing states’ provider taxes at current rates and prohibiting them from establishing new provider taxes. The Senate’s move has sparked pushback, and threatened to complicate the delicate balance reached in the House. 

Then on Thursday morning, Senate Democrats on the Budget Committee announced that the provider tax plan was among a handful of key provisions that the Senate’s rulekeeper had determined would violate what’s known as the Byrd Rule, which requires that the legislation only include provisions that have a direct impact on federal spending. 

Senate Majority Leader Sen. John Thune speaks alongside Sen. John Barrasso and Sen. Mike Crapo outside of the West Wing of the White House on June 4, 2025, in Washington, D.C.

Senate Majority Leader Sen. John Thune speaks alongside Sen. John Barrasso and Sen. Mike Crapo outside of the West Wing of the White House on June 4, 2025, in Washington, D.C.

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images


The parliamentarian’s rulings

The Senate parliamentarian, Elizabeth MacDonough, has been examining the legislation to determine whether any provisions violate the upper chamber’s rules. Provisions that do are subject to a 60-vote threshold, rather than the simple majority required under the reconciliation process. 

Senate Democrats said the parliamentarian also weighed in on a measure cutting federal funds to states that use Medicaid infrastructure to provide health care coverage to undocumented immigrants, along with banning Medicaid from covering gender transition services.

The announcement on the rulings came days after the parliamentarian determined that Republicans can’t include language that would make it harder to challenge the government’s actions in court, along with a section barring immigrants who are not citizens or lawful permanent residents from receiving food assistance benefits under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

The parliamentarian also rejected a proposal that would have sold off millions of acres of public lands. She struck provisions regarding the sale of electric vehicles used by the United States Postal Service and several immigration-related measures, including limiting certain funding for “sanctuary cities” and allowing states to conduct border security and immigration enforcement. 

Senate Republicans are working to tweak some of the measures to comply with the parliamentarian’s rulings, and her deliberations on other parts of the legislation are ongoing.

GOP Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana called the parliamentarian’s decision on the provider tax a “setback,” outlining that Senate Republicans will decide whether to rewrite the details of the provision to comply with the Byrd Rule — or move forward without the provider tax.

Meanwhile, the move sparked pushback among some congressional Republicans. Rep. Greg Steube, a Florida Republican, said Vice President JD Vance, the president of the Senate, should overrule the parliamentarian. And GOP Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama said she should be fired. 

Sen. Rick Scott, a Florida Republican, told reporters Thursday that the parliamentarian’s ruling was “pretty frustrating.” But he added that he’s “optimistic that we can come up with ways to make sure we fulfill the Trump agenda and also have fiscal sanity.” And Sen. Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, said he expected the conference would try to retool the provision, while noting that although he doesn’t agree with the ruling, he has “no intention of overruling her.”

Senate Majority Leader John Thune told reporters when asked about the possibility of overruling the parliamentarian earlier this month that “we’re not going there.”

But Thune faced difficulties even ahead of the rulekeeper’s decisions as he worked to keep his conference together on the massive legislation. On Wednesday, the South Dakota Republican told reporters that “we’re working with all of our members to try to get people comfortable with the bill.”

With a 53-seat majority, Senate GOP leaders can afford to lose just three Republicans on the bill, with all Democrats expected to oppose. 

Thune outlined earlier in the week that “when push comes to shove, you’re looking at whether or not you’re going to allow the perfect to become the enemy of the good.”

“You have to recognize that this is a process whereby everybody doesn’t get everything they want,” Thune said. “But I think we’ve produced a bill working with the House, working with the White House, that will get the requisite number of Republican senators to vote for it so that we can pass it.”

Grace Kazarian,

Ellis Kim and

Nikole Killion

contributed to this report.

More from CBS News

Kaia Hubbard

Kaia Hubbard is a politics reporter for CBS News Digital, based in Washington, D.C.

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Kaia Hubbard

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