BBC News, Washington DC
The US Congress has passed Donald Trump’s huge tax and bill to spend the bill in an important and difficult battle for the President and his domestic agenda.
After a fierce session on Capital Hill, the House of Representative passed the bill by 218 to 214 votes. On Thursday afternoon. It was approved by one vote in the Senate on Tuesday.
Trump gave the Republican-controlled Congress a deadline of July 4 to send the final version of the bill to sign the law.
The Congress budget office estimates that the bill may add $ 3.3TN (£ 2.4tn) to the federal deficit in the next 10 years and leave millions without health coverage – a forecast that the White House dispute.
Speaking to reporters on Thursday evening, Trump said the bill “would turn the country into a rocket ship”.
“This is going to be a great bill for the country,” he said.
He is expected to sign a law on 17:00 EDT (22:00 BST) at a ceremony on a ceremony on the National Holiday of July 4.
A victorious Republican Speaker Mike Johnson emerged from the House after a vote and told reporters that “Vishwas” was important to support within his party.
“I believed in those who stand behind me … are more fun to deal with some of them,” he said. “I mean with the biggest level of respect.”
Among them, he had to explain that the Texas Republican, a representative Chip Roy, which was a firm “not” a few days ago when the Senate passed his own version of the bill. He called the Senate version a “trays”, but his mind changed until the voting begins.
“I think we get a good result on important things,” Roy said, although the House did not make any changes to the Senate Bill.
While some Republicans like Roy opposed the Senate version, only two MPs of Trump’s own party voted “Nay” on Thursday: Thomas Massey and Brian Fitzpatrick.
Johnson announced that the law had passed the chamber by four votes, dozens of Republic MPs “USA!
The passage of the bill on Thursday delayed the Democratic House Minority Leader Hakim Jeffrees, who gave the longest speech in the history of the Chamber.
His “magic minute” address, a custom that allows party leaders to speak as long as he wanted, lasting eight hours and 45 minutes.
Jeffrees promised to take “sweet time from American people”, reducing the impact of the bill on poor Americans.
The law saves through food benefits and health care cuts and rolling tax brakes for clean energy projects.
It also distributes Trump’s two major campaign promises – tips at a cost of $ 4.5TN in 10 years, makes their 2017 tax deduction on overtime and social security recipients permanent and lifting taxes.
About $ 150BN (£ 110BN) will be spent on border security, preventive centers and immigration enforcement officers. Another $ 150BN has been allocated for military expenditure, including the President’s “Gold Dome” missile defense program,
Democrats, who used procedural exercises to prevent the House’s vote, were important for the final bill.
He portrayed it as a tax cut to the rich as a health care and food subsidy from millions of Americans.
Former speaker, Nancy Pelosi of California said, “Today enters in a dark and annoying time”, and the bill was called “Dangerous Checklist of Extreme Republican priorities”.
Debora Ross of North Carolina said: “There is shame on those who voted to hurt many people in the service of so few people.”
While Arizona’s Yasamin Ansari said she was “just feeling really unhappy”, while Texas’s Mark VC labeled the Republican Party of “Coward, Anarchy and Corruption”.
The fate of the so -called ‘big, beautiful bills’ hung in a lot of balance on Wednesday as the Republican rebels worked about the impact of the firm with concerns about the impact on the national debt – inspired a fierce missile from Trump.
“What are the Republican waiting for ??? What are you trying to prove ??? Maga is not happy, and it is the cost of votes to you !!!,” They wrote on the truth social after midnight on Thursday after midnight.
Both the Congress chambers are controlled by Trump’s Republican Party, but many factions within the party were on major policies in long laws.
In the early hours of Thursday, the Republican leadership grew more confidently, and a procedural vote on the bill was passed only after 03:00 EDT (07:00 GMT).
The final vote on the bill will come after about 12 hours at 14:30 EDT (19:30 GMT).