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The post đď¸ Steve McQueenâs legendary Le Mans Porsche race car featured at Florida car show, auction appeared first on www.clickorlando.com
News from the South - Florida News Feed
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The post ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ Opens in Florida amid protests, praise, and legal threats appeared first on www.abcactionnews.com
News from the South - Florida News Feed
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The post Democrats face harsh reality as voters change party affiliation, Dems need to change their strategy appeared first on www.news4jax.com
News from the South - Florida News Feed
US Senate after overnight debate unable to gain enough votes yet to pass GOP megabill
by Jennifer Shutt and Ashley Murray, Florida Phoenix
July 1, 2025
WASHINGTON â U.S. Senate Republicans approved their signature tax break and spending cuts package Tuesday with a tie-breaking vote cast by Vice President JD Vance, following days of tense, closed-door negotiations that went until the few last minutes of a marathon amendment voting session.
The 51-50 mostly party-line vote sends the legislation back to the House, where GOP leaders hope to clear the bill for President Donald Trumpâs signature this week, by their self-imposed July Fourth deadline. But frustrations throughout the House GOP Conference over changes made in the Senate could delay or even block final approval.Â
Republican Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Rand Paul of Kentucky and Thom Tillis of North Carolina voted against approving the legislation over concerns it would not benefit the countryâs finances or Republican voters.
Changes made in final negotiations were not immediately clear or publicly available.
Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski , whose support had been unclear until the vote, and Majority Whip John Barrasso, of Wyoming, left the chamber to catch an elevator together just after 9:30 a.m. Eastern.
Asked if the bill was in the hands of the parliamentarian, Murkowski quipped, âI think itâs in the hands of the people that operate the coffee machine.â
Barrasso said âYesâ when asked if it would pass this morning.
Trump weighs in
Trump told reporters on Tuesday morning before leaving for a Florida visit to the âAlligator Alcatrazâ immigrant detention site that âitâs very complicated stuffâ when asked about Senate Republicansâ debate over spending cuts.
âWeâre going to have to see the final version. I donât want to go too crazy with cuts. I donât like cuts. There are certain things that have been cut, which is good. I think weâre doing well,â Trump said. âWeâre going to have to see, itâs some very complicated stuff. Great enthusiasm as you know. And I think in the end weâre going to have it.â
The heart of the nearly 1,000-page legislation extends and expands the 2017 tax law to keep individual income tax rates at the same level and makes permanent some tax breaks on business investments and research and development costs.
The bill would also put in motion some of Trumpâs campaign promises, including no tax on qualifying tips, overtime or car loan interest, but only for a few years.
And it slashes spending on the Medicaid program for low-income people and some people with disabilities as well as shifting significant costs of the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, to states for the first time. It also overhauls federal education aid
It would also bolster spending on border security and defense by hundreds of billions of dollars, including line items for the âgolden domeâ missile defense system and additional barriers along the southern border.
The measure would provide a substantial funding increase for federal immigration enforcement for detention and removal of people without permanent legal status, aiding the president in carrying out his campaign promise of mass deportations.
The bill would raise the debt limit by $5 trillion, a figure designed to get Congress past next yearâs midterm elections before the country would once again bump up against the borrowing limit.
On to the House
House approval is far from guaranteed.
Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., can only lose four Republicans if all lawmakers in that chamber attend the vote. Several GOP members have voiced frustration with how the Senate has reworked the legislation, signaling an uphill climb for the bill.
House Ways and Means Chair Jason Smith said as he left the Senate cloakroom just after 9:20 a.m. Eastern that lawmakers are âgetting closer to a bill signing on July Fourth.â
âIf you followed this journey over the last six months, over and over, people said that we could not accomplish a budget (reconciliation bill). We did. They said we would never pass it out of the House. We did. The Senate is going to pass it. The House is going to pass it, and the presidentâs going to sign it into law,â the Missouri Republican said.
Three amendments succeed
The Senate had adopted three amendments to the bill following an all-night amendment voting session, known as a vote-a-rama.
Tennessee Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn was able to remove language from the package that would have blocked state and local governments from regulating artificial intelligence for five years if they wanted access to a $500 million fund. That vote was 99-1 with only North Carolinaâs Tillis voting to keep the language in the package.
Blackburn said the change was necessary because lawmakers in Congress have âproven that they cannot legislate on emerging technology.â
Senators approved an amendment from Iowa GOP Sen. Joni Ernst by voice vote that would disqualify âanyone making a million dollars or more from being eligible for unemployment income support.â
Louisiana Republican Sen. John Kennedy was able to get an amendment adopted by a voice vote that would move up the date when Medicaid administrators must begin checking the Social Security Administrationâs death master file to determine if a new enrollee is alive before adding them to the health program. It was set to begin on Jan. 1, 2028, but will now begin one year earlier.
Senators rejected dozens of amendments offered by both Democrats and Republicans, some of which deadlocked on 50-50 votes. Maineâs Collins and Alaskaâs Murkowski broke with their party several times to vote with Democrats.
National private school voucher program
Hawaii Democratic Sen. Mazie Hirono tried to eliminate a sweeping private school voucher program thatâs baked into the reconciliation package, but that vote failed 50-50. Collins, Nebraska Republican Sen. Deb Fischer and Murkowski voted in support.
The original proposal called for $4 billion a year in tax credits beginning in 2027 for people donating to organizations that provide private and religious school scholarships.
But the parliamentarian last week deemed the program to not comply with the âByrd Bath,â a Senate process named for the late Sen. Robert Byrd, forcing senators to rework the program.
Details on the finalized version of the program remain unknown as the final bill text has not been released.  Â
Safety funding for Virginia airport across from DC
Virginia Democratic Sen. Mark Warner tried to add language to the bill that would have increased safety funding for airports near Washington, D.C., and established a memorial for the victims who died in a crash this January. The vote failed on a tied 50-50 vote, with Collins, Kansas GOP Sen. Jerry Moran and Murkowski voting with Democrats in support.
âColleagues, we all know that on January 29 of this year, 67 individuals lost their lives when a military helicopter and a passenger jet collided near Reagan National Airport. This tragedy underscores the need for more safety improvements at National Airport,â Warner said. âThe reconciliation bill increases, actually doubles, the amount of rent that National and Dulles pay the government but doesnât use any of that money to make those airports and the people who use them any safer.â
He argued there was âno good rationale for increasing those rents and not using them for aviation safety.â
Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz spoke against Warnerâs amendment, saying the rents for the two airports in Virginia near the nationâs capital havenât been updated in decades.
âThe federal government originally calculated the rent in 1987 at $7.5 million dollars, massively below market rates,â Cruz said. âThis bill increases that to $15 million, still dramatically below market rates.â
Cruz â chairman of the Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation â said the legislation includes $12.5 billion for the Federal Aviation Administration to âtransform the air traffic control systemâ and said his panel is looking into the collision in order to prevent something similar from happening again.Â
Trump budget directorâs office targeted
Maryland Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen also got within one vote of having an amendment adopted when he tried to remove a section from the bill that would increase funding for the White House budget office by $100 million.
âThis is at a time when (Federal Emergency Management Agency) grants to many of our states have been canceled, grants for law enforcement have been frozen, grants for victims of crimes are on hold,â Van Hollen said. âThat is not efficiency. That is creating chaos and uncertainty. And I ask my colleagues, why in the world would we want to send another $100 million to OMB?â
Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson opposed the efforts, saying âthe Office of Management and Budget needs to identify budgeting and accounting efficiencies in the executive branch. They need the resources to do it.â
The amendment was not added to the bill following another tied 50-50 vote with Collins, Murkowski and Paul voting with Democrats in favor.
Had GOP leadership wanted either of those proposals added to the package, they could have had Vance break the tie, but they did not.
Collins loses vote on rural hospital fund
Maineâs Collins tried to get an amendment added to the legislation that would have increased âfunding for the rural health care provider fund to $50 billion dollars and expand the list of eligible providers to include not only rural hospitals but also community health centers, nursing homes, ambulance services, skilled nursing facilities and others.â
Collins said the additional $25 billion in funding for the fund would be paid for by âa modest increase in the top marginal tax rate, equal to the pre-2017 rate for individuals with income above $25 million and married couples with income above $50 million.â
Collinsâ amendment was subject to a Senate procedural limit known as a budget point of order. She was unable to get the votes needed to waive that on a 22-78 vote.
Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden spoke against Collinsâ proposal, calling it âflawed,â and introduced the budget point of order against her amendment.
âThe danger Senate Republicans are causing for rural hospitals is so great, Republicans have had to create a rural hospital relief fund so they can look like they are fixing the problem they are causing,â Wyden said. âIt is a Band-Aid on an amputation. It provides just a tiny fraction of the nearly $1 trillion in cuts the bill makes to Medicaid. It would be much more logical to simply not cut $1 trillion from Medicaid in the first place.â
Collins received a mix of support from Republicans, including West Virginia Shelley Moore Capito, Louisianaâs Bill Cassidy, Utahâs John Curtis, Nebraskaâs Fischer, South Carolinaâs Lindsey Graham, Missouriâs Josh Hawley, Ohioâs Jon Husted and Bernie Moreno, Mississippiâs Cindy Hyde-Smith and Roger Wicker, Louisianaâs Kennedy, Kansans Roger Marshall and Moran, Kentuckyâs Mitch McConnell, Alaskans Dan Sullivan and Murkowski and Indianaâs Todd Young.
Also voting to waive the point of order and move forward with the amendment were Georgiaâs Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock and Virginiaâs Warner, all Democrats, and independent Maine Sen. Angus King.
Shauneen Miranda contributed to this report.Â
Last updated 12:22 p.m., Jul. 1, 2025
Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com.
The post US Senate after overnight debate unable to gain enough votes yet to pass GOP megabill appeared first on floridaphoenix.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader âStaff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Right
This article presents a largely factual report on the Republican-led Senate debate over a major tax and spending bill, highlighting the internal GOP divisions and the legislative process. The focus on Republican senators, their amendments, and commentary from GOP leaders like JD Vance and Mike Johnson, as well as former President Donald Trump, reflects a center-right perspective centered on conservative fiscal priorities such as tax cuts and spending reductions. Although it includes some Democratic opposition and viewpoints, the tone remains largely neutral but leans toward presenting the Republican agenda in a detailed and substantive manner without overt critique or praise.
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