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After Muscling Their Bill Through the House, Some Republicans Have Regrets

After Muscling Their Bill Through the House, Some Republicans Have Regrets

New York Times3 days ago

When Republicans muscled their sweeping domestic policy bill through the House by a single vote after an overnight debate, they breathed a sigh of relief, enjoyed a celebratory moment at sunrise and then retreated to their districts for a weeklong recess.
Not even two weeks later, the victory has, for some, given way to regret.
It turns out that the sprawling legislation to advance tax and spending cuts and cement much of President Trump's domestic agenda included a raft of provisions that drew little notice or debate on the House floor. And now, Republicans who rallied behind it are claiming buyer's remorse about measures they swear they did not know were included.
Last week, Representative Mike Flood of Nebraska admitted during a town hall meeting in his district that he did not know that the bill would limit judges' power to hold people in contempt for violating court orders. He would not have voted for the measure, he said, if he had realized.
And as lawmakers returned to Washington on Tuesday after their weeklong break, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia said that she had been unaware that the mega-bill she voted for would block states from regulating artificial intelligence for a decade.
'Full transparency, I did not know about this section,' Ms. Greene posted on social media, calling it a violation of states' rights and adding that she 'would have voted NO if I had known this was in there.'
The remorseful statements highlighted the realities of legislating in the modern age. Members of Congress, divided bitterly along partisan lines and often working against self-imposed political deadlines, have become accustomed to having their leaders throw together huge pieces of legislation at the very last moment — and often do not read the entirety of the bill they are voting on, if they read any of it at all. At the same time, the polarization of Congress means that few pieces of legislation make it to the floor or to enactment — and the few 'must pass' bills that do are almost always stuffed full of unrelated policy measures that would otherwise have little hope of passing on their own.
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