Several Republicans of the US Senate tried to proceed to the main tax and expenditure laws, and on Thursday they broke out in anger and ordered their frustration to the parliamentary Senate Elizabeth Macdonough. Her decision found that specific policies of Medicaid wanted to include damaged strict rules governing the special process of “reconciliation of the budget” they use.
This rapid procedure allows legislation to pass on a simple majority of 51 votes, which bypasses the usual 60-voice threshold, but stores strict limits that policy changes can be included. MacDonough found that the contested provisions of Medicaid did not qualify.
The decision caused the immediate will of some conservatives. “The Senate Council should be released ASAP,” said the first senator Tommy Tuberville (R-A), who runs for the governor. “That’s the perfect example of why Americans hate swamps.” Tuberville, which was joined by Senator Roger Marshall (R-KS), repeated the call of some Republicans from the house to remove MacDonough, the first woman to play a role since its formalization in 1935.
Party divisions are deepened as a process and precedent
However, this view represents a minority in the Senate of GOP. The Republican leadership, including the leader of most of John Thun, stated consistently that the party would follow the instructions of parliament. MacDonough’s office did not offer any commentary on criticism.
The incident underlines a wider voltage. Some Republicans are increasingly released by the non -Startisan congress institutions. Many of them ignored the costs of the costs of the Neptisan Congress Budget Office (CBO), which would assume that the bill could add nearly $ 3 trillion to state debt, including interest.
The massive costs of the law have already revealed deep cracks within the party. Hardline conservatives require significant cuts on programs such as Medicaid to compensate for costs, while others fear that such cuts could damage the party’s prospects in the elections by mid 2026, due to their narrow majority.
Critics have described MacDonough “unchanged”, but the role of a deputy as a referee for reconciliation was founded by Congress himself decades ago. Its task is not to assess political merit, but only whether the proposals correspond to the complex rules of the Senate of the budget and precedents.
Pratisan group
Republicans that hold the slim majority rely on reconciliation – the same tool used for Trump 2017 tax cuts and Democrats under Biden – to approve their bill. Some Republicans proposed that MacDonough’s decision be politically motivated and noted her appointment of 2012 by a democratic leader. In 2021, however, blocked democratic efforts to include minimal provisions on remuneration and immigration in reconciliation accounts.
Thursday’s decisions on the provisions of Medicaid and Healthcare were particularly significant, because some Republicans were considered key opportunities to reduce the overall impact on state debt of $ 36.2 trillion. This year, MacDonough informed about other aspects of the bill.
However, most of the Republicans of the Senate advocate the process and MacDonough. “I consider Members a direct shooter. So I don’t think there is something more than not to meet the standard,” said Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC). Senator John Kennedy (R-LA) was even more direct: “No, never constitute a deputy.”
GOP now faces elections: Review the provisions of Medicaid to fit into the rules of reconciliation or abandon them completely. Democrats, led by a member of the evaluation of the Budget Committee Jeff Merley (D-OR), undertook to fight the provisions that they consider to be violations and harm the families. While shooting a deputy is rare, it happened before.
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In 2001, when the Senate was evenly distributed, Republican leaders dismissed deputies after the decision on tax legislation on the Bush era. The current clash emphasizes high bets and intense pressure surrounding the legislative pressure of GOP.
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