Trump urges senators to get his big tax bill done by July 4th
[June 04, 2025]
By LISA MASCARO and MARY CLARE JALONICK
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump wants his “big, beautiful” bill
of tax breaks and spending cuts on his desk to be signed into law by the
Fourth of July, and he's pushing the slow-rolling Senate to make it
happen sooner rather than later.
Trump met with Senate Majority Leader John Thune at the White House
earlier this week and has been dialing senators for one-on-one chats,
using both the carrot and stick to nudge, badger and encourage them to
act. But it's still a long road ahead for the 1,000-page-plus package.
“His question to me was, How do you think the bill's going to go in the
Senate?” Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., said about his call with Trump. “Do
you think there's going to be problems?”
It's a potentially tumultuous three-week sprint for senators preparing
to put their own imprint on the massive Republican package that cleared
the House late last month by a single vote. The senators have been
meeting for weeks behind closed doors, including as they returned to
Washington late Monday, to revise the package ahead of what is expected
to be a similarly narrow vote in the Senate.
“Passing THE ONE, BIG, BEAUTIFUL BILL is a Historic Opportunity to turn
our Country around,” Trump posted on social media. He urged senators
Monday “to work as fast as they can to get this Bill to MY DESK before
the Fourth of JULY.”
But Trump's high-octane ally, billionaire Elon Musk, lambasted the
package — and those voting for it.
“This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a
disgusting abomination,” Musk posted on his site X, as some lawmakers
have expressed reservations about the details. “Shame on those who voted
for it: you know you did wrong. You know it.”

A test for Thune
Thune, like House Speaker Mike Johnson, has few votes to spare from the
Senate's slim, 53-seat GOP majority. Democrats are waging an all-out
political assault on GOP proposals to cut Medicaid, food stamps and
green energy investments to help pay for more than $4.5 trillion in tax
cuts — with many lawmakers being hammered at boisterous town halls back
home.
“It’d be nice if we could have everybody on board to do it, but, you
know, individual members are going to stake out their positions,” Thune
said Tuesday. “But in the end, we have to succeed. Failure’s not an
option.”
Johnson called Musk’s harsh criticism of the bill “very disappointing.”
“With all due respect,” said Johnson, who said he spoke with Musk for
more than 20 minutes, “my friend Elon is terribly wrong about the one
big beautiful bill.”
At its core, the package seeks to extend the tax cuts approved in 2017,
during Trump's first term at the White House, and add new ones the
president campaigned on, including no taxes on tips. It also includes a
massive buildup of $350 billion for border security, deportations and
national security.
To defray the lost tax revenue to the government and avoid piling onto
the nation's $36 trillion debt load, Republicans want reduce federal
spending by imposing work requirements for some Americans who rely on
government safety net services. Estimates are 8.6 million people would
no longer have health care and nearly 4 million would lose Supplemental
Nutritional Assistance Program benefits, known as SNAP.
The package also would raise the nation's debt limit by $4 trillion to
allow more borrowing to pay the bills.
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said Trump's bill "is ugly to its
very core.”

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As Senate Republicans work to advance President Donald Trump's
spending and tax bill, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who is opposed to the
reconciliation package because of the debt-limit increase, does a TV
news interview at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, June 3, 2025.
(AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Schumer said Tuesday that senators should listen to Musk. “Behind the
smoke and mirrors lies a cruel and draconian truth: tax breaks for the
ultra-wealthy paid for by gutting health care for millions of
Americans," said the New York senator.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office is expected to soon provide
an overall analysis of the package's impacts on the government balance
sheets. But Republicans are ready to blast those findings from the
congressional scorekeeper as flawed.
The GOP holdouts
Trump switched to tougher tactics Tuesday, deriding the holdout
Republican senators.
The president laid into Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, the libertarian-leaning
deficit hawk who has made a career of arguing against government
spending. Paul wants the package's $4 trillion increase to the debt
ceiling out of the bill.
“Rand votes NO on everything, but never has any practical or
constructive ideas. His ideas are actually crazy (losers!),” Trump
posted.
Paul seemed unfazed. “I like the president, supported the president,”
the senator said. “But I can’t in good conscience give up every
principle that I stand for and every principle that I was elected upon.”
The July 4th deadline is not only aspirational for the president, it's
all but mandatory for Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who has warned
Congress that the nation will run out of money to pay its bills if the
debt ceiling, now at $36 trillion, is not lifted by mid-July or early
August to allow more borrowing. Bessent has also been meeting behind
closed doors with senators and GOP leadership.
To make most of the tax cuts permanent — particularly the business tax
breaks that are the Senate priorities — senators may shave some of
Trump's proposed new tax breaks on automobile loans or overtime pay,
which are less prized by some senators.
There are also discussions about altering the $40,000 cap that the House
proposed for state and local deductions, known as SALT, which are
important to lawmakers in high-tax New York, California and other
states, but less so among GOP senators.

“We're having all those discussions,” said Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C.,
another key voice in the debate.
Hawley is a among a group of senators, including Maine Sen. Susan
Collins and Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, who have raised concerns about
the Medicaid changes that could boot people from health insurance.
A potential copay of up to $35 for Medicaid services that was part of
the House package, as well as a termination of a provider tax that many
states rely on to help fund rural hospitals, have also raised concerns.
“The best way to not be accused of cutting Medicaid is to not cut
Medicaid,” Hawley said. Collins said she is reviewing the details.
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Associated Press journalists Kevin Freking, Mary Clare Jalonick, Matt
Brown, Joey Cappelletti, Michelle L. Price, Josh Boak and Nathan Ellgren
contributed to this report
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