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Trump Administration’s Controversial Tax Cut Bill Approved

U.S. Senate ‌passes Trump’s sweeping tax and budget bill, sends it to House of Representatives.

The Republican-controlled U.S. Senate narrowly approved Donald ⁤Trump’s major tax and budget legislation on tuesday, according to webangah News Agency citing⁢ Reuters. The expansive package implements many of ​his domestic priorities ⁤while adding $3.3 trillion to‌ the national debt.

The bill now‍ returns to the House of Representatives for final approval, where resistance from some Republicans against Senate modifications could complicate ⁣its passage. Trump aims to sign the ‍legislation into law⁤ by Independence ⁤Day (July⁣ 4), with House Speaker Mike Johnson stating his commitment ⁣to meeting this ⁤deadline.

The proposal includes meaningful tax cuts for corporations and individuals ‌while restructuring⁣ federal spending priorities through 2031.

News Sources: ©⁤ webangah News Agency,mehr News Agency,Reuters

The U.S. Senate has passed a sweeping tax reform bill that extends Trump-era tax cuts, introduces new exemptions for tip and overtime income, boosts military spending and immigration enforcement, ⁣while reducing ⁣healthcare and food assistance programs ⁤for low-income Americans.

The legislation was ⁢approved by a 51-50‌ vote, with Vice President J.D.⁢ Vance casting the ​decisive tiebreaker after three Republicans – North Carolina’s Thom Tillis, ‍Maine’s‍ susan Collins, and Kentucky’s Rand Paul – joined all 47 Democrats in opposing the measure.

Senate Majority ‌Leader John Thune hailed the Republican legislative victory, stating the bill “permanently extends tax⁣ relief for hardworking Americans” while promising stronger economic growth and ⁣expanded job opportunities for U.S.workers.

The package⁢ renews key provisions from the 2017 tax Cuts and Jobs Act ​under former President Trump while implementing new policies affecting ‌tipped wages, defense budgets ($886 billion authorized), border security funding ($20 billion), and reductions to Medicaid ($30 billion) along with Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) ​benefits.

News⁢ Sources: © webangah news agency

The vote followed lengthy overnight negotiations, with Republicans raising concerns about the bill’s costs and its impact on America’s ‌healthcare system. Last-minute amendments to address these issues remain unclear.

A significant portion of the final negotiations focused on securing support from Lisa Murkowski, the Republican senator from Alaska, who had‍ previously stated she would​ not vote for the bill without substantial changes.

The Senate’s final⁣ version included two key⁣ provisions to win her approval:‌ increased food assistance‌ funding for Alaska and several other ⁤states, plus a $50 billion allocation to help rural hospitals address severe healthcare​ budget cuts.

The bill now moves to the House of Representatives for consideration. If approved there, it ​will go to President Donald trump for ⁤his ⁢signature.

News Sources: © webangah News Agency
English channel of the webangah news agency on Telegram
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