WASHINGTON — Republican senators unveiled a budget proposal Wednesday that’s central to President Donald Trump’s domestic agenda of tax breaks, spending cuts and border security, but they’re delaying some of the most difficult decisions, including how to pay for the multitrillion-dollar package.
Trump hosted Senate Republicans at the White House as they charge ahead to pass the framework by week’s end. Facing a wall of Democratic opposition, Trump publicly and privately assured the GOP senators he would back the plan — including its massive cuts to government programs and services. It also boosts the nation’s debt limit by $5 trillion.
‘‘The Senate plan has my complete and total support,‘’ Trump said at a White House event later in the day announcing his new tariffs.
The president also lobbed a warning to the senators: ‘’I won’t like them so much if they don’t get this bill done.‘’
The Senate GOP’s budget framework would be the companion to the House Republicans’ $4.5 trillion tax cuts package that also calls for cutting as much as $2 trillion from health care and other programs. If the Senate can approve its blueprint, it would edge Trump’s allies on Capitol Hill closer to a compromise setting the stage for a final product in the coming weeks.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said ‘’it’s now time for the Senate to move forward.‘’
While big differences remain, Republicans face increasing political pressure to deliver on what is expected to be Trump’s signature domestic policy package: extending the tax cuts, which were initially approved in 2017, during his first term at the White House. Those tax breaks expire at the end of the year, and Trump wants to expand them to include new no taxes on tipped wages, overtime pay and other earnings, as he promised during the 2024 campaign.
Democrats are preparing to oppose the GOP tax plans as giveaways to the wealthy, coming as billionaire Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency is taking a ‘’chain saw’’ to the federal government. They warn Republicans plan to cut government programs and services that millions of Americans depend on nationwide.