The
Senate took an initial vote Thursday to advance a budget blueprint for enacting President Trump’s agenda, with all but one Republican unifying around the outline for sweeping tax and spending cuts.
Ultimately, only one Republican, Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, could not be swayed to support it.
Thursday’s procedural test vote advanced, 52-48.
Code:
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2025/apr/3/senate-republicans-minus-rand-paul-coalesce-around-budget-plan/
The Senate took an initial vote Thursday to advance a budget blueprint for enacting President Trump’s agenda, with all but one Republican unifying around the outline for sweeping tax and spending cuts.
www.washingtontimes.com
From the article:
"Fiscal hawks were worried the blueprint would not provide adequate guarantees the budget reconciliation bill it sets up will cut deep into federal spending...
...
Fiscal hawks were worried the blueprint would not provide adequate guarantees the budget reconciliation bill it sets up will cut deep into federal spending.
...
He predicted Republicans will ultimately find trillions of dollars in spending to cut but that they need flexibility to ensure they can get enough votes to pass the bill.
“We’ll cut spending until you run out of votes,” Mr. Graham said.
Sen. Bill Cassidy, Louisiana Republican, worried the budget blueprint did not call for enough spending reductions to pay for the tax increases it would allow. He does not buy into the “current policy” baseline
Senate Republicans are using to exempt the cost of extending tax cuts that are already in law, but voted to advance the budget nonetheless.
...
Fiscal hawks agreed to back the budget based on commitments the reconciliation package will include the trillions in cuts needed to reduce federal spending to pre-pandemic levels.
...
Sen. Rick Scott, Florida Republican, also said the president’s personal commitment to reduce spending to pre-pandemic levels pushed him to support the budget plan.
“I like what the president is saying. I like what [Majority Leader John] Thune is saying; he’s committed to pre-pandemic levels,” he told The Times."
...
"sweeping tax and spending cuts."
LOL. There will be no sweeping spending cuts. That is a bald faced lie from the usual suspects. Rand is right, although Bill Cassidy may have made the more politically prudent vote. It passed anyway, so there was room for Rand to make his point.
And there were no cuts in this vote. It was purely procedural. The GOP establishment will hide behind the ten year threshold. "Sure, it will raise spending for 9 years, but just wait until that 10th year!"