Republican
senator denounces Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ in fiery speech
Thom Tillis
also announces he won’t seek re-election after opposing Medicaid cuts in
proposed budget bill
George Chidi
Mon 30 Jun
2025 18.04 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/30/thom-tillis-big-beautiful-bill-medicaid-cuts-trump
“It is
inescapable this bill will betray the promise Donald Trump made,” Thom Tillis,
the North Carolina Republican senator, said on Sunday night, sandblasting the
Senate version of the “big, beautiful bill” that is meant to codify the
president’s agenda.
Tillis made
his speech on the Senate floor on Sunday night, a few hours after announcing he
would not seek re-election in politically competitive North Carolina. Observers
described it as “fiery” and “savage”. But Tillis carefully avoided direct
criticism of the president as he denounced proposed cuts to Medicaid, a lack of
rigor in the legislative process and the Senate’s headlong drive to an
artificial deadline.
Instead, in
one of the most forceful Republican denunciations of the bill, Tillis attacked
“amateurs” advising the president who have “no insight into how these provider
tax cuts are going to be absorbed without harming people on Medicare”.
Tillis’s
office published an analysis concluding that the Senate budget would have a
$32bn impact on the North Carolina healthcare system and threaten insurance
coverage for 663,000 Medicaid expansion beneficiaries in the state – about one
in 16 North Carolinians.
“What do I
tell 663,000 people in two years or three years, when President Trump breaks
his promise by pushing them off of Medicaid because the funding’s not there any
more, guys?” Tillis said in his floor speech.
It has
become increasingly difficult for lawmakers in the Republican party to break
ranks with the president without facing withering blowback from conservative
media, “Maga” diehards and Trump himself on social media.
“Tillis is a
talker and complainer, NOT A DOER! He’s even worse than Rand ‘Fauci’ Paul!”
Trump posted on Truth Social after announcing his opposition to the bill. Trump
pledged to back a primary challenger to Tillis. When Tillis subsequently
announced he would not seek re-election, Trump called it “good news”, and
threatened primary challenges against other Republican fiscal conservatives
standing in the way of the bill’s passage.
Arguments
critical of conservative doctrine on healthcare would fall on deaf ears.
Instead, Tillis’s rhetoric emphasized the political threat to Republican
lawmakers and the president himself if the bill passed in its current form.
“I’m telling
the president that you have been misinformed,” he said. “You supporting the
Senate mark will hurt people who are eligible and qualified for Medicaid.”
Tillis
referred back to Trump’s promise not to cut Medicaid while campaigning for
president.
“The last
time I saw a promise broken around healthcare, with respect to my friends on
the other side of the aisle, is when somebody said “If you like your
healthcare, you could keep it. If you like your doctor, you could keep it,”
Tillis said. “We found out that wasn’t true. That made me the second Republican
speaker of the House since the civil war.”
Tillis
signaled he would be willing to support the House version of the reconciliation
bill.
The
procedural vote passed 51-49 Sunday. Budget reconciliation bills are not
subject to cloture and the 60-vote threshold limiting debate. Trump has
repeatedly pushed a 4 July deadline for passage.
.jpeg)
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário