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'Every Single Republican': Top Dem Reveals Plan To Use Trump To Beat GOP In 2026

'Every Single Republican': Top Dem Reveals Plan To Use Trump To Beat GOP In 2026

Yahoo09-07-2025
Republicans are celebrating last week's passage of President Donald Trump's signature so-called 'big beautiful bill,' but House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) said that will cost the GOP in next year's midterm elections.
The bill cuts taxes for the wealthy, raises the national debt, and slashes essential services such as Medicaid.
'The one big ugly bill represents the largest cut to Medicaid in American history,' Jeffries said on MSNBC on Tuesday. 'Hospitals will close, nursing homes will shut down, community-based health clinics will be unable to operate, and people are going to die in community after community after community, including in rural America.'
He said Americans don't like the bill ― polls show it's wildly unpopular ― but Republicans 'turned around and bent the knee to Donald Trump ― because that's what they do.'
'It's an embarrassment,' he said. 'And now that embarrassment will actually result in the American people being hurt in devastating ways.'
Jeffries said Democrats will make sure Americans know who's responsible for this bill during next year's midterm elections.
'We are going to tattoo this disgusting abomination of a bill to the foreheads of every single Republican who voted for it,' he said.
The party that wins the White House almost always loses seats during the midterm elections that follow, and already prognosticators are lining up to make similar predictions for next year given the bill's unpopularity.
Fox News host Jessica Tarlov said last week that 'moderate Republicans are ensuring their retirement will come earlier than expected' due to their support for the bill.
Former MSNBC host Chris Matthews said he expects Democrats to pick up between 15 and 20 seats in the House ― more than enough to give the party control.
However, Democrats do face at least one obstacle: themselves.
NPR reports that while Congressional Republicans have an approval rating of just 35%, support for Democrats is even lower at 27%.
See Jeffries' full conversation with MSNBC's Ari Melber below:
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