GOP senators push ahead on Trump's tax cuts package, punting big
decisions for later
[April 02, 2025]
By LISA MASCARO and KEVIN FREKING
WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Republicans said they are pushing ahead on
President Donald Trump'sbig bill of tax breaks and spending cuts this
week, even though they're punting some of the most difficult decisions —
including the costs and how to pay for the multitrillion-dollar package
— until later.
The Senate GOP’s budget framework would be the companion to the House
Republicans' $4.5 trillion tax cuts package that also calls for slashing
some $2 trillion from health care and other programs. If the Senate can
move the blueprint forward, it edges Trump's allies on Capitol Hill
closer to a compromise setting the stage for a final product in the
weeks ahead.
“Obviously we are hopeful this week we can get a budget resolution on
the floor that will unlock the process,” said Senate Majority Leader
John Thune, R-S.D. “And so we are continuing to move forward with that.”
While big differences remain, Republicans face increasing political
pressure to deliver on what is expected to be Trump’s signature domestic
policy package — extending the tax cuts, which were initially approved
in 2017, during his first term at the White House. Those tax breaks
expire at the end of the year, and Trump wants to expand them to include
new no taxes on tipped wages, overtime pay and other earnings, as he
promised on the campaign trail.
Democrats are preparing to oppose the GOP tax plans as giveaways to the
wealthy, coming as billionaire Elon Musk's Department of Government
Efficiency is taking a “chainsaw” to the federal government. They warn
Republicans plan to slash government programs and services that millions
of Americans depend on nationwide.

“We are standing together against the GOP tax scam and in defense of the
American people,” House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries said alongside
others on the Capitol steps late Tuesday.
One main sticking point between the House and Senate GOP plans has been
over whether the existing tax cuts, which are estimated to cost the
federal government $4.5 trillion over the decade in lost revenue, need
to be paid for by spending reductions elsewhere. Adding Trump's new tax
breaks to the package would balloon the price tag even higher.
To offset the costs, House Republicans are demanding some $2 trillion in
cuts to health care and other accounts to stem the nation's federal
deficits and prevent the nation's $36 trillion debt load from
skyrocketing.
But GOP senators have a different approach. Senate Republicans take the
view that since the tax cuts are already the current policy, they would
not be new — and would not need to be paid for. They want to use this
current policy baseline moving forward, meaning only Trump's other
proposed tax breaks would come with a new cost. They are expected to set
much lower spending cuts as a floor that can be raised, if needed, to
compromise with the House's $2 trillion in cuts.
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Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., joined by Sen. John
Barrasso, R-Wyo., the GOP whip, left, talks to reporters at the
Capitol, in Washington, Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott
Applewhite)

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and top Democrats call the
Senate GOP's approach a gimmick at best — if not an outright “lie.”
“It is an obscene fraud and the American people won’t stand for it,”
said Schumer, Sen. Jeff Merkley of the Budget Committee and Sen. Ron
Wyden of the Finance Committee in a letter to GOP leadership.
Democratic Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey argued against the GOP
baseline as “a gimmick” that would slash important federal services
while growing deficits.
“What they're investing in is bigger tax cuts for the wealthiest,”
Booker said during a landmark overnight speech.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and congressional GOP leaders have
been meeting privately as Trump's priority package churns on Capitol
Hill. At a meeting with other Senate Republicans late Monday at the
Capitol, Bessent urged them to get it done.
“We just got to start voting,” said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, as he
exited the Monday evening session.
"Treasury secretary made the point that this was something we needed
to do — and do it quickly,” Cornyn said, adding the plan was for the
Senate to launch the voting this week. "We’re going to grind through
it.”
Typically, the current policy baseline proposal would need to pass
the muster of the Senate's nonpartisan parliamentarian, to make sure
it abides by the strict rules of the budget process. Senators from
both parties have been arguing in closed-door sessions with the
parliamentarian staff — for and against the idea.
However, the GOP leaders say they don’t necessarily need the Senate
parliamentarian, at this point, to resolve the issue, and they
believe the Senate Budget chairman, Sen. Lindsay Graham, R-S.C.,
should simply use his perch to allow their current policy baseline
approach.
What is more certain is that they want to move quickly this week to
pass the framework. That will entail a lengthy all-night vote —
often called a vote-a-rama with consideration of various amendments
and procedures — that could drag into the weekend. Then, they will
sort out the details later as the Republicans, facing Democratic
opposition, build the actual package for consideration in the weeks
if not months ahead.
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