This is John Thune’s big moment. It’s now down to the Senate majority leader to renegotiate the bill carrying President Donald Trump’s promised tax cuts that was released just yesterday and wrangle enough GOP votes to get it passed. The goal is to get all this done — including another House vote — in the next few weeks. Thune has his work cut out for him. The draft legislation released so far by Senate committees doesn’t have the votes to pass either the Senate or the House. It ignored some of the fragile compromises made in the House to get it passed (just barely) there as well as demands from different factions of the Senate GOP. Thune, who can only afford to lose three Republican votes, risks hitting an impasse if he moves too far in either direction. Thune Photographer: Eric Lee/Bloomberg “Ultimately that’s the math that I’m working with,” Thune said today. “We are having conversations with our members.” The toughest issue is Medicaid. The Senate bill makes even deeper cuts to the program than the House version did. That has senators from states where more voters rely on Medicaid, like Missouri Republican Josh Hawley, balking. Another potential hurdle is Trump, who promised not to cut Medicaid (though the definition of what constitutes a cut is flexible). Hawley said he talked with the president, who “was also surprised by what they did on this.” Meanwhile hard-line conservatives like Wisconsin’s Ron Johnson say the spending cuts don’t go far enough, and has Medicare in his sights as well. There are dozens of smaller fights, as well, on provisions from gun regulation to radio spectrum auctions. Thune also will need to strike a deal on the state and local tax deduction cap. The likely result will be a limit somewhere between the $10,000 in the Senate bill and the $40,000 cap in the House version, but getting there could be rocky given how dug in both sides are. Thune will no doubt rely on Trump to help corral members of the party even as the president is occupied by a growing crisis in the Middle East. But Thune’s credibility as majority leader will be made or broken in how he handles the next few weeks, and the US will live with the resulting changes to the tax code and health system for years to come. — Erik Wasson Key reading: |