Close Menu
POTUS News
  • Home
  • Health & Welfare
    • Environmental & Energy Policies
    • Historical & Cultural Context
    • Immigration & Border Policies
  • Innovation
    • International Relations
    • Judiciary & Legal Matters
    • Presidential News
    • Regional Spotlights
  • National Security
  • Scandals & Investigations
    • Social Issues & Advocacy
    • Technology & Innovation
  • White House News
    • U.S. Foreign Policy
    • U.S. Government Agencies
    • U.S. Legislative Updates
    • U.S. Political Landscape

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

What's Hot

Trump’s Ukraine Shift Sends the Right Signal to Putin

July 16, 2025

Peter Thiel just bought a big stake in the Tom Lee’s ether company and the shares are surging

July 16, 2025

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang sells another $37 million worth of stock

July 16, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
POTUS NewsPOTUS News
  • Home
  • Health & Welfare
    • Environmental & Energy Policies
    • Historical & Cultural Context
    • Immigration & Border Policies
  • Innovation
    • International Relations
    • Judiciary & Legal Matters
    • Presidential News
    • Regional Spotlights
  • National Security
  • Scandals & Investigations
    • Social Issues & Advocacy
    • Technology & Innovation
  • White House News
    • U.S. Foreign Policy
    • U.S. Government Agencies
    • U.S. Legislative Updates
    • U.S. Political Landscape
POTUS News
Home » Here’s how Senate committees changed Trump’s ‘one big, beautiful bill’ | National
Health & Welfare

Here’s how Senate committees changed Trump’s ‘one big, beautiful bill’ | National

potusBy potusJune 18, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email


(The Center Square) – The last U.S. Senate committees have submitted revisions to the House-passed One Big Beautiful Bill Act, shoring up funding for big-ticket items while making further changes to Medicaid, SNAP, student loan options and more.

House committees worked for months to assemble the multitrillion-dollar budget reconciliation package implementing President Donald Trump’s tax, border, energy and defense priorities. 

Senate committees have now put their stamp on the bill, most notably by raising the debt ceiling by $5 trillion rather than $4 trillion and by making key provisions from the expiring 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act permanent, versus extending them for 10 years only.

As reported by The Center Square, that includes the boosted maximum standard deduction and across-the-board tax cuts; the 20% Qualified Business Income deduction; and $2,000 child tax credit, though the Senate Finance Committee reduced the House’s four-year $500 boost to $200.

Although the Finance committee keeps the House’s temporary nixing of taxes on tips and overtime, it caps deductions for tips at $25,000 and deductions for overtime at $12,500 for single filers. 

The committee also expands the House’s charity deductions for un-itemized filers and the temporary tax cut for eligible seniors, boosting the senior $4,000 deduction to $6,000. As with the child tax credit, however, taxpayers would need a social security number to claim it.

Three key business tax credits would become permanent as well – full reimbursement for new capital investments like machinery and equipment, an expanded deduction for corporation’s interest on debt, and immediate deductions for companies’ research costs. 

The cost of permanently extending the tax cuts will raise the OBBBA’s already enormous price tag, according to budget watchdogs. So Senate committees found even deeper savings than the House’s $1.7 trillion by further overhauling Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. 

Under the Senate plan, the amount states can tax Medicaid providers will cap at 3.5% by 2031, down from the House’s version of 6%. It softens the House’s new Medicaid work requirements, however, by exempting enrollees with dependents under the age of 14. 

The Senate’s SNAP reforms expand on the House’s, which require states to cover 50% of administrative costs and 5% of their SNAP benefit cost share. But the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry hikes the state administrative cost burden to 75%. 

Additionally, under the House plan, states’ benefit cost contributions would increase the higher their payment error rates, with states having an average error rate of 10% paying 25% of SNAP benefit costs. The Senate version would exempt states with an error rate below 6% from this requirement and lower the 25% cost share cap to 15%

Financial aid and student loan repayment changes made by the House to extract more savings would see some edits as well. The Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee section keeps current Pell Grant eligibility standards in place, rather than keeping the House’s proposed restrictions, and proposes more limitations on graduate student borrowing. 

It also keeps Subsidized Stafford loans — repealed in the House version — and scraps House changes to Income-Based Repayment for current borrowers. 

Funding for homeland security and border initiatives remains disputed in the Senate’s version of the bill. The Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs committee, chaired by known fiscal hawk Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., allocates $39 billion in spending. 

Dissatisfied with that amount, the Senate Budget Committee intervened, releasing its own border security funding package that allocates over $127 billion for border security activities. 

Other changes Senate committees made include slowing phase outs of Inflation Reduction Act subsidies for energy projects, killing the House’s hard-fought quadrupling of the $10,000 SALT deduction cap, axing a proposed excise tax on private foundations, lowering a proposed 21% tax on university endowments to 8%, and relaxing licensing and registration requirements for certain guns and suppressors.

However, many House and Senate provisions could be stripped by the Senate parliamentarian in the coming weeks if they don’t meet the Senate’s Byrd rules, which limit budget reconciliation bills to fiscal matters.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
potus
  • Website

Related Posts

WATCH: As Pritzker claims hospitals will close, Republican points to $50B fund | Illinois

July 12, 2025

Opioid settlement nets $23M for North Carolina | North Carolina

July 12, 2025

Nevada hospitals set to lose $232 million from Medicaid cuts | Nevada

July 11, 2025

Health care workers to strike in Chambersburg | Pennsylvania

July 11, 2025

New York manufacturer chooses Winston-Salem for $11.4M facility | North Carolina

July 11, 2025

Illegal aliens barred from taxpayer-funded HHS programs | National

July 11, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

U.S. Foreign Policy

Trump’s Ukraine Shift Sends the Right Signal to Putin

July 16, 2025

During his first term in 2017, U.S. President Donald Trump took bold action that many…

Trump’s Disinterest Has Stalled Ukraine’s Democracy

July 16, 2025

Rubio’s Asia Visit Was a Total Bust

July 15, 2025

Trump’s Jacksonian Approach to U.S. Foreign Policy

July 14, 2025
Editors Picks

Which US states could be hit hardest by Trump’s Canada and Mexico tariffs? | Business and Economy News

March 5, 2025

China sets 5 percent growth target despite trade war with US | Trade War News

March 5, 2025

As Trump roils stock markets, investors are betting big on Europe’s defence | Military

March 5, 2025

Climate crisis threatens Pakistan’s bees and honey trade | Climate Crisis News

March 4, 2025
About Us
About Us

Welcome to POTUS News, your go-to source for comprehensive news and in-depth analysis on President Trump, the White House, and U.S. governance. Our mission is to provide timely, reliable, and detailed coverage on key political, economic, and social issues under President Trump’s administration, as well as the broader U.S. government.

Our Picks

Trump’s Ukraine Shift Sends the Right Signal to Putin

July 16, 2025

Peter Thiel just bought a big stake in the Tom Lee’s ether company and the shares are surging

July 16, 2025

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang sells another $37 million worth of stock

July 16, 2025

Peter Thiel just bought a big stake in the Tom Lee’s ether company and the shares are surging

July 16, 2025

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang sells another $37 million worth of stock

July 16, 2025

Nvidia CEO wants to sell advanced chips to China after H20 ban lifted

July 16, 2025

Crypto bounces on renewed optimism House could pass key stablecoin legislation this week

July 16, 2025
© 2025 potusnews. Designed by potusnews.
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.