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The idea of putting all the republican legislative priorities in a single bill for the year is a rejected concept of Donald Trump that the Republicans have had concerns about Since the first day. The Senate Republicans, since the start of Trump's second term, have expressed the desire to divide the bill into manageable documents which could be more easily adopted.
However, Trump is still rabid that Biden has obtained large bipartite legislation adopted, and he tries to overcome it.
The problem is that the real nuts and bolts of the legislation put the process to a ramp.
The republicans of the Chamber in the Blue States have a ton of power because they want a complete and local tax deduction, and the magazines of the red state do not want the deduction, and now the Republicans of the Blue State threaten to let the whole bill collapse.
Punchbowl News reported:
But here is the problem for Johnson and Smith: Lawler, Lalota, plus the representatives Andrew Garbarino (RN.Y.), the young Kim (R-Calif.) And Tom Kean (RN.J.) are encouraged to train this process as long as possible to obtain the best possible offer. And most of them seem absolutely ready to do so.
In fact, some GOP legislators and assistants have argued in private that they would better let the whole reconciliation process collapse and take a tax agreement at the end of December with the Democrats. A bill as this would almost certainly maintain all the tax reductions in place, be silent on reductions in politically risky expenditure and restore the complete deduction of state and premises taxes. It would be a nightmare for the majority of the republican conference of the Chamber, but it would be a dream for the Republicans in the Blue State.
Since he took over the majority in the mid-term elections of 2022, the Républicains de la Chambre have demonstrated their incompetence to govern. The only consistency of the GOP house was their inability to do anything.
The idea that this group could adopt the agenda of an entire year in a bill is a fantasy that borders the inconvenience.
President Mike Johnson's deadline for the adoption of this legislation by Memorial Day or shortly after does not occur, and the prolonged deadline of July 4 will probably not happen.
Republicans are now discussing how it takes months of negotiation to get anything.
The Blue State Republicans want to calm and potentially plant this process because if they do not obtain state deductions and local, they can embrace their seats.
The whole process is a card house that could be intended to fail.
What do you think of Trump's “big bill” potentially Trump? Share your reflections in the comments below.
