House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has two main jobs in funding President Donald Trump’s regressive agenda: setting deadlines and counting votes. He has yet to prove he’s particularly adept at either, which makes it unlikely he’ll get Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” through the House by Memorial Day as he hopes. And when it comes to getting enough votes to pass what’s likely to be the most consequential bill of the year, he’ll have to skillfully juggle a competing set of priorities in which one dropped ball could cause the whole thing to come tumbling down.
Republicans are trying this week to give some shape to this amorphous blob of a plan. The first few House markups are happening now. Once that process is done, Johnson still must cobble together all the pieces into one bill that achieves near unanimity from his caucus. There are plenty of troublemakers in the far-right camp who have already said they’ll happily let the speaker’s Memorial Day deadline lapse if the bill doesn’t satisfy their demands for savings. And once a final bill passes the House, it will still have to go to the Senate, where it may take pretending math isn’t real and ignoring the chamber’s rules to get the bill over the line. That’s likely to be a bridge too far for some Republicans.
Republicans are trying this week to give some shape to this amorphous blob of a plan.
The House and the Senate passed a budget framework for Trump’s agenda this month only by glossing over the details that had certain factions of the party at odds with one another. For example, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., had to reassure holdout House conservatives that his caucus was more committed to spending cuts than it would appear from the version his chamber had passed the previous week. Johnson told reporters before the bill narrowly squeaked over the finish line that the “first big, beautiful reconciliation package here involves a number of commitments, and one of those is that we are committed to finding at least $1.5 trillion in savings for the American people while also preserving our essential programs.”
Where those savings come from, though, is a problem that will bedevil Republicans who will try to fulfill their promise to slash spending without hurting or angering their own constituents. They also want to ensure that the tax cuts for the wealthy passed during the first Trump administration don’t lapse next year. Preserving those tax cuts alone is set to cost an estimated $4.6 trillion over the next 10 years. That doesn’t include Trump’s ideas to end taxes on tips and overtime pay. (The math-centric among you are likely to see that $4.6 trillion in new costs is more than $1.5 trillion in reductions.)
Some Republicans from states such as California and New York are clamoring for even more tax breaks. They’ve been angry since 2017 at the cap placed on the federal deduction for state and local taxes, commonly known as SALT, which more heavily affects their constituents in high-tax states. Others want to preserve previous tax cuts from former President Joe Biden’s administration that have sparked investment and job growth in the green energy sector. While Trump’s administration has waged war on those funds, which are considered a prime target for big savings in the upcoming bill, some Republicans worry about how clawing back that money will play in their districts.
There’s also the little matter of dealing with Trump’s tariffs and the abrupt halting of foreign aid spending, policies that are harming American farmers. Maybe they’ll get a similar bailout package as they did in the first Trump administration, but that would add more spending to the ledger. And we can’t forget the $150 billion increase in defense spending proposed by the House and another almost $60 billion for Trump’s immigration enforcement crackdown.








