After a nail-biter vote within the Senate, the Home took up President Donald Trump’s tax and immigration megabill on Tuesday, with Home Speaker Mike Johnson suggesting a vote may very well be held as early as Wednesday.
Trump’s “One Large Lovely Invoice” was accepted by the Senate on Tuesday, with Vice President JD Vance casting a tie-breaking vote to get the laws throughout the road and send it to the House for consideration.
GOP Sens. Thom Tillis, Rand Paul and Susan Collins voted in opposition to the measure, together with each Democrat, placing the vote at 50-50 earlier than Vance’s intervention.
The laws handed the Home Guidelines Committee early on Wednesday with a 7-6 vote and can be debated on the ground after legislative enterprise begins at 9 a.m.
Trump’s invoice is anticipated to face some opposition within the Home, notably amongst fiscal hawks.
Reps. Ralph Norman and Chip Roy are pictured throughout a Home Guidelines Committee assembly on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on July 1, 2025.
Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters
Republican backers of the Senate bill have touted its roughly $4 trillion in tax cuts and new funding for border safety, plus the inclusion of key Trump marketing campaign pledges equivalent to no taxes on ideas and additional time.
The laws additionally guts Biden-era clear power initiatives; slashes entitlement well being applications like Medicaid and SNAP, that are meant to assist the nation’s most weak People; and features a plan to elevate the cap on the state and native tax deduction, at the moment set at $10,000, to $40,000.
The Senate model is projected so as to add roughly $1 trillion extra — and $3.3 trillion in whole — to the deficit over the following decade in comparison with the model handed by the Home in Might, in line with an estimate from the nonpartisan Congressional Funds Workplace.
The CBO additionally discovered that 11.8 million individuals might go uninsured over the following decade as a result of cuts in Medicaid, which emerged as a important difficulty amongst a number of of the Senate Republican holdouts.
With a razor-thin majority, Johnson can afford solely three defections if all members are voting and current.
Johnson additionally mentioned Tuesday night that some members have been dealing with issues getting again to Washington, D.C., after greater than 1,200 flights have been canceled or delayed throughout the nation due to storms within the jap U.S.
Nonetheless, Johnson advised Fox Information’ Sean Hannity on Tuesday night time that he expects a vote within the Home on Wednesday or Thursday.
“Assuming we have now a full Home, we’ll get it by means of the Guidelines Committee within the morning,” he mentioned. “We’ll transfer that ahead to the ground, and hopefully we’re voting on this by tomorrow or Thursday at newest, relying on the climate and delays and journey and all the remaining.”
Having handed the Home Guidelines Committee, the laws can be topic to a debate and a vote on the rule, which might happen as early as Wednesday morning.
The Home will then transfer to a vote on remaining passage, after which the invoice can be despatched to Trump’s desk.

Sens. Senator Elissa Slotkin and Andy Kim sit on the septs of the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on July 1, 2025.
Nathan Howard/Reuters
Johnson and high Republican leaders mentioned in a press release that the Home will contemplate the invoice “instantly for remaining passage” — with renewed intent to place the measure on Trump’s desk by July 4.
“The American individuals gave us a transparent mandate, and after 4 years of Democrat failure, we intend to ship directly,” the leaders mentioned.
“This invoice is President Trump’s agenda, and we’re making it legislation. Home Republicans are prepared to complete the job,” they added.
Trump advised ABC Information’ Chief White Home Correspondent Mary Bruce on Tuesday that he expects the invoice “to go very properly” within the Home.
Requested concerning the Home Republicans who have been sad with the Senate’s model of the laws, the president mentioned, “Nicely, I simply heard that concerning the Senate, and the invoice simply handed, and it tells you there’s one thing for everybody.”
“I imply, we have now — it is an amazing invoice,” he continued. “There’s something for everybody, and I feel it is going to go very properly within the Home. Truly, I feel it will likely be simpler within the Home than it was within the Senate.”
Trump disputed the CBO’s projection that the invoice would trigger 11.8 million People to lose their insurance coverage.
“I am saying it is going to be a really a lot smaller quantity than that and that quantity can be waste, fraud and abuse,” he mentioned, although didn’t say the place he was getting such information or evaluation from.
The Home course of started Tuesday with a gathering of the Guidelines Committee, which accepted the invoice by 7-6 after nearly 12 hours of dialogue. GOP Reps. Ralph Norman and Chip Roy sided with Democrats in voting in opposition to the measure in committee.
Roy was among the many early critics of the invoice, saying he was “not inclined to vote” for the laws as amended. Roy has beforehand threatened to withhold assist on important votes, solely to finally facet with the president.

President Donald Trump speaks to reporters aboard Air Drive One on July 1, 2025.
Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters
Roy mentioned “the general deficit quantity will not be good” within the invoice the Senate handed, suggesting it violates the Home’s finances framework. “It is front-loaded versus back-loaded, as everyone knows. I feel it bought worse. I feel SALT bought worse. It bought dearer,” he added.
After Tuesday’s Senate vote, Majority Chief John Thune mentioned he and his colleagues had delivered a “robust product” to the Home, but in addition acknowledged there could also be extra hurdles earlier than the laws reaches Trump’s desk.
“Nicely, we’ll see,” Thune mentioned when requested concerning the invoice’s possibilities. “I imply, you understand how exhausting it was to go it — I feel the Home, I respect the slender margins they’ve over there.”
“I feel we took what they despatched us and strengthened and improved upon it,” he added. “And so I am hopeful that now, when it will get despatched over there, as they deliberate about how they need to deal with it, they’re going to discover the targets which can be essential to go it.”
ABC Information’ John Helton, Isabella Murray, Mary Bruce and Alex Ederson contributed to this report.