he U.S. Senate has narrowly approved President Trump’s sprawling “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” in a tense 51–50 vote, with Vice President J.D. Vance casting the decisive tiebreaker. The landmark legislation, which fuses extensions of the 2017 tax cuts with sweeping entitlement reforms and major increases in defense and border funding, now heads back to the House for final negotiations.
After a marathon 24-hour “vote-a-rama,” the Senate’s version emerged with notable changes: contentious provisions like a 10-year ban on state-level AI regulations and a measure restricting federal courts’ contempt powers were struck down for violating the Byrd Rule on budget reconciliation.
The final vote exposed sharp GOP divides—three Republican senators, Rand Paul, Thom Tillis, and Susan Collins, opposed the bill, citing concerns about ballooning deficits and cuts to Medicaid. The legislation includes a $5 trillion debt limit increase, which remains a flashpoint for House fiscal conservatives.
House Republican leaders are under intense pressure to pass the Senate’s version by the July 4 deadline, but the path is far from clear. With their slim majority and growing pushback from members worried about rural hospital cuts and fiscal sustainability, the outcome is uncertain. “We have serious concerns about how this will impact rural communities,” Rep. David Valadao said, highlighting just one of the obstacles leadership faces.
If the House approves the bill and President Trump signs it next week, it will mark one of the most consequential shifts in U.S. tax and entitlement policy in decades, driven by an aggressive bet on supply-side stimulus, major structural reforms, and an ambitious political timetable. The stakes for fiscal markets, Treasury supply, and the broader economy now hang on whether lawmakers can navigate the final stretch without triggering renewed debt ceiling brinkmanship or investor anxiety over the country’s long-term fiscal trajectory.
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