logo
Ron Johnson takes on Trump's ‘big, beautiful bill'

Ron Johnson takes on Trump's ‘big, beautiful bill'

Yahoo3 days ago

Senators are making noises about changing President Donald Trump's sweeping tax and spending bill. Then there's Ron Johnson.
The hard-charging Wisconsin Republican is leading a full-on assault on the House-passed bill's deficit-expanding impacts, armed with charts, presentations to his colleagues and a myriad of media appearances knocking the legislation. And if Johnson can't support the legislation, it further hamstrings Republican leaders who have already lost one senator's vote in their 53-seat majority.
In several recent interviews, Johnson made clear he wants big changes but is trying to be reasonable. He accepts Republicans' contention that expiring tax cut extensions do not need to be paid for and concedes it's unlikely he'll prevail in splitting the bill up into two pieces at this point.
But the man who nearly took a pass on running for a third term in 2022 has little to lose politically as he makes his push: He's already served longer than he planned. And it's clear he sees the fight in front of him as a legacy maker for his career, which began with a shocking victory against a longtime Democratic senator.
'I ran in 2010 because I was panicked for this nation. I'm more panicked now,' Johnson told Semafor. 'There's a lot that I love about what President Trump's doing. I'm a big supporter. I want to see him succeed. But right now, the 'big, beautiful bill'? That's just rhetoric. It's completely false advertising. It's literally divorced from reality.'
Summing up the growing deficit, he said: 'We're currently projecting $2.2 trillion … Obama is under a trillion. Trump had increased it, Biden increased dramatically. Trump's not doing anything to fix that.'
Johnson alone can't sink the bill. But the situation echoes a similar problem Speaker Mike Johnson faced in the House: Fiscal conservatives balking. Speaker Johnson won out by tweaking some of the bill's dials; Sen. Johnson says he needs more than that.
Johnson isn't alone in his criticism: Sens. Rand Paul, R-Ky., Mike Lee, R-Utah, and Rick Scott, R-Fla., oppose the House legislation and want bigger deficit reductions. There's no question that Johnson's seen as the bill's lead critic.
'Nobody should underestimate it. I mean, it's not like Ron's been shy about his position on this. And he's been the conservative conscience of the chamber, certainly of the [Republican] conference,' said Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D. 'He's serious. And we ought to take him seriously.'
GOP leaders say they are doing just that amid a careful balancing act. If Senate Majority Leader John Thune and his team pursue harsher austerity to win over conservatives, they risk alienating centrists.
Two GOP leadership aides expressed confidence they can get it done. One said Republicans are currently 'drafting legislation that delivers on the Republican agenda and delivers 51 votes.'
'The Senate is going to work through its own processes and make changes along the way. Tax permanency and maximum savings are among the Senate's top priorities,' said a second leadership aide. 'Failure isn't an option.'
GOP leaders want to see action before the July 4 recess, and the pressure to support the legislation will start to build Monday and peak right before the holidays. Many Republicans concede the real deadline is later. Some think August is more realistic; Cramer suggested the end of the fiscal year — Sept. 30.
The legislation currently includes a lift to the debt ceiling, which could come up as soon as late summer. Johnson knows what the argument is going to be.
'They package everything into one big bill and: 'you're gonna allow us to default? You're gonna allow a massive tax increase?'' Johnson said. 'We've got a structural deficit of about 6%, the gap between revenue and spending. That's probably gonna go to 7% with the big, beautiful bill. That is the wrong direction.'
Johnson's record is filled with uphill fights. In 2017 he threatened to vote against the GOP's Obamacare repeal bill but ultimately supported it. That same year, he took on the GOP's tax cuts — using his early opposition as leverage to increase pro-business proposals in the bill, which he supported.
In 2021, a livid Johnson forced the Senate clerk to read the entire Democratic American Rescue Plan. After winning reelection in 2022, Johnson helped lead the opposition to the reelection of Mitch McConnell as the Senate Republican leader and backed Scott's failed upstart bids.
In other words, Republicans are not writing off his words as just rhetoric.
'It's really not that absurd what he's suggesting. It's just something that will take longer than between now and the Fourth of July,' Cramer said.
Johnson — or RonJohn — sees a chance to make a mark. After Paul, he appears to be the most likely GOP senator to vote no. He's always been a loose cannon (particularly after winning reelection in 2016 with scant national support) and he's a wealthy businessman who doesn't need the job.
But Johnson is a lot more comfortable fighting with congressional leaders than he is with Trump, and there's a decent chance Johnson is using his platform (he's been all over the airwaves during the Memorial Day recess) to help shape the bill and get Trump's attention.
Johnson was also one of the loudest critics of Trump's tariffs. But when the Senate voted on cancelling them, he sided with the president — who, to be fair, eventually watered down the levies.
Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, told Semafor that while critics from the right are loudest, there are plenty of senators with more nuanced opinions.
'You have some people who come to the conversation with just a very principled view on spending and what we need to do with reductions in spending, and do it in an aggressive, aggressive way,' Murkowski said. 'But you have others who are looking at it through perhaps a little different lens. And so how are we going to work it out? It'll be much like the sausage making that went over on the House side.'
Johnson might run for a fourth term, but not for president, he said this week.
The Wisconsin Republican's win in 2016 was actually more than his 2010 win.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Donald Trump's Latest Truth Social Conspiracy Theory Repost About Joe Biden Being Replaced By "Clone Doubles" Is Going Viral, And It's Deeply Unserious
Donald Trump's Latest Truth Social Conspiracy Theory Repost About Joe Biden Being Replaced By "Clone Doubles" Is Going Viral, And It's Deeply Unserious

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Donald Trump's Latest Truth Social Conspiracy Theory Repost About Joe Biden Being Replaced By "Clone Doubles" Is Going Viral, And It's Deeply Unserious

In the last few weeks, former President Joe Biden has seemingly been on Donald Trump's mind A LOT. Earlier this week, Trump went on a mini-rant in the Oval Office, calling Biden "vicious," and most recently, he took to Truth Social to repost a strange conspiracy theory about the former president. On Saturday night, Trump took to Truth Social to repost a conspiracy theory from a pro-MAGA account about Biden supposedly being "executed in 2020" and replaced by "clone doubles." The original post reads: "There is no #JoeBiden - executed in 2020. #Biden clones doubles & robotic engineered soulless mindless entities are what you see. >#Democrats dont know the difference," followed by dozens of political hashtags. According to Rolling Stone, this same account has posted other conspiracies about the 2020 election being stolen via "cyber warfare." Related: 18 Major Global Events That American Media Is Ignoring Right Now, And Why They Actually Matter To Us Far-right conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer (who reportedly traveled with Trump during the 2024 campaign trail) reacted to Trump's conspiracy repost with a laughing emoji. Many others did NOT find the sitting president reposting unfounded conspiracy theories amusing, and weren't afraid to express it: Related: "I Am So Torn With What You Are Doing" — 11 Posts From MAGA Business Owners Who Are So Close To Getting It "Trump believes anything that attacks his perceived enemies and makes him feel better," one person wrote. "We live in the most ridiculous possible world," another person wrote. "If Biden had said something like this, his entire cabinet would have invoked the 25th within the hour, and rightfully so," Reddit user Nerevarine91 wrote, referring to the Constitution's 25th Amendment that allows the president to be removed from office if deemed "unfit to serve." "This is such a degradation of America," Reddit user Medlarmarmduke agreed. What are your thoughts? Let us know in the comments below. Also in In the News: People Can't Believe This "Disgusting" Donald Trump Jr. Post About Joe Biden's Cancer Diagnosis Is Real Also in In the News: Miss USA's 2024 "National Costume" Has Been Revealed, And It's Obviously An Interesting Choice Also in In the News: One Body Language Expert Spotted Something Very Telling When Donald Trump "Held His Own Hand" At His Recent Press Conference

Trump Spews Out Bizarre Conspiracy Theory That Biden Was ‘Executed' In 2020 And Replaced By Clones
Trump Spews Out Bizarre Conspiracy Theory That Biden Was ‘Executed' In 2020 And Replaced By Clones

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Spews Out Bizarre Conspiracy Theory That Biden Was ‘Executed' In 2020 And Replaced By Clones

President Donald Trump spewed out a bizarre conspiracy theory, claiming on social media that former President Joe Biden died in 2020 and was replaced with clones. On late Saturday night on his social media platform Truth Social, Trump shared a post from a pro-Trump account that alleged Biden was killed in 2020 and the country had been run by 'robotic engineered soulless mindless entities' during Biden's entire term. 'There is no #JoeBiden - executed in 2020. #Biden clones doubles & robotic engineered soulless mindless entities are what you see. Democrats dont know the difference,' the post that Trump shared read. HuffPost has reached out to the White House for comment. Trump's wife was previously at the center of similar conspiracy theories. Back in 2019, Trump denied the rumors and conspiracy theories that flooded the internet, which claimed his wife, First Lady Melania Trump, had been replaced by a body double during his first term in the White House. 'The Fake News photoshopped pictures of Melania, then propelled conspiracy theories that it's actually not her by my side in Alabama and other places,' Trump tweeted at the time. 'They are only getting more deranged with time!' Last month, Trump entertained another conspiracy theory that Biden hid his cancer diagnosis while he was in office. The White House announced on May 18 that Biden was diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer. 'There are things going on that the public wasn't informed [about],' Trump alleged of Biden's diagnosis while speaking with reporters in the Oval Office on May 19. Trump then appeared to suggest that the situation should be investigated. 'Why wasn't the cognitive ability, why wasn't that discussed? And I think the doctor said he's just fine,' he continued. 'And, it's turned out that's not so. It's very dangerous. Look, this is no longer politically correct. This is dangerous for our country.' Biden On His Cancer Diagnosis: 'We're Going To Be Able To Beat This' Trump Says 'If You Feel Sorry' For Biden, 'Don't Feel So Sorry' The Extremely Dumb Excuse That Republicans Are Using To Justify Trump's Corruption

Trump's "one big beautiful bill" holdout Sen. Rand Paul says "the math doesn't really add up"
Trump's "one big beautiful bill" holdout Sen. Rand Paul says "the math doesn't really add up"

CBS News

time37 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Trump's "one big beautiful bill" holdout Sen. Rand Paul says "the math doesn't really add up"

Washington — Sen. Rand Paul, a Kentucky Republican, said Sunday that "the math doesn't really add up" on the cost of President Trump's "one big beautiful bill," while outlining his opposition as the legislation moves to the Senate this week. "I think they're asking for too much money," Paul said on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan." Paul is among a handful of Senate Republicans who have expressed opposition to the centerpiece legislation of Mr. Trump's second term agenda that addresses the president's tax, defense and energy priorities and which the House narrowly approved last month. The Kentucky Republican argued Sunday that with the legislation, "there's going to be a lot of extra money" going toward "padding the military budget" and additional border security when "the President has essentially stopped the border flow without new money and without any legislation." But Paul's red line, he indicated, is on the legislation's provision that would to raise the debt ceiling. The House-passed bill includes a $4 trillion debt ceiling hike, while the Senate's budget blueprint contained a $5 trillion increase. And Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told congressional leaders earlier this month that the federal government could be unable to pay its bills as soon as August if Congress doesn't act. Paul has advocated for removing the debt ceiling provision from the bill and voting on the issue separately. Paul said he wants to vote for the legislation and its tax components should the debt ceiling component be removed, saying "in all likelihood, I can vote for what the agreement is on the rest of the bill, and it doesn't have to be perfect to my liking." But for him, the debt ceiling increase is a nonstarter. "If I vote for the $5 trillion debt, who's left in Washington that cares about the debt?" Paul said. "The GOP will own the debt once they vote for this." Congressional Republicans have sought to raise the debt ceiling as part of the broader budget package because the reconciliation process that governs the bill allows them to move forward without support from across the aisle. Separating the debt ceiling component from the broader bill would mean Senate Republicans would have to negotiate with Democrats, giving them an opportunity to extract leverage despite the GOP majorities in Congress. Still, Paul argued that the Republicans who support the spending increase should be the ones responsible for voting for a debt ceiling increase, noting that Democrats have historically supported raising the debt limit as well. The Kentucky Republican has also proposed smaller increases that suspend the debt limit for a matter of months, forcing lawmakers to verify that spending cuts have been implemented before approving a further hike. Mr. Trump warned Paul about opposing the legislation in a post on Truth Social Saturday, saying "Rand will be playing right into the hands of the Democrats, and the GREAT people of Kentucky will never forgive him!" Meanwhile, Bessent, who also appeared Sunday on "Face the Nation," pushed back on the bill's forecasted impact on the deficit, pointing to income from tariffs among other things that he said will improve the full picture. The treasury secretary said changes to the bill will be "the Senate's decision," noting that he's been working closely with Senate Majority Leader John Thune, whom he said has been "doing a fantastic job." "Everyone said that Speaker Johnson would not be able to get this bill out of the House with his slim majority – he got it out, " Bessent said. "Leader Thune has a bigger majority, and this is with President Trump's leadership." Asked about the administration's red lines as the bill heads to the Senate, Bessent pointed to some of the president's campaign promises, including no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, no tax on Social Security, among others, which he said would "have to stay in." On the debt limit, Bessent urged that "the United States of America is never going to default." But he declined to specify an X date, or the date the U.S. will run out of money to pay its bills. "That is never going to happen," he added. "We are on the warning track, and we will never hit the wall."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store