All Episodes
June 4, 2025 23:18-00:01 - CSPAN
42:58
House GOP Leaders Hold News Conference
Participants
Main
m
mike johnson
rep/r 14:58
s
steve scalise
rep/r 07:00
Appearances
a
amy klobuchar
sen/d 00:53
j
john barrasso
sen/r 01:07
j
john thune
sen/r 02:06
l
lisa mcclain
rep/r 04:25
m
mike crapo
sen/r 00:55
p
pete aguilar
rep/d 00:31
t
tom emmer
rep/r 02:29
Clips
c
chuck grassley
sen/r 00:29
t
ted lieu
rep/d 00:13
|

Speaker Time Text
pete aguilar
Workforce, I think, is also incredibly important.
As we've said before, seniority and length of tenure is always a factor, but it is one of many factors that members consider.
And members will arrive at their own decisions and make a pick for the ranking member position.
That's our expectation.
The vice chair and I are tasked with presiding over the election.
So our job is to just make sure that it's done in a fair way and to make sure that the members hear directly from the candidates.
ted lieu
I just want to say that just because someone's a senior member, it doesn't mean they have less energy.
One point of fact: Speaker Pelosi had and continues to have more energy than most human beings that I know.
pete aguilar
Thank you.
unidentified
Thank you.
House Republican leaders held a press conference on Capitol Hill condemning the attack in Boulder, Colorado, where a man attempted to kill individuals with Molotov cocktails.
House Speaker Mike Johnson also answered questions about the party's recently passed tax and spending cuts legislation.
This is about a half an hour.
steve scalise
That's our mantra, by the way.
unidentified
That's where we're coming.
steve scalise
We're looking at our show.
Hogan's all in now.
lisa mcclain
I got the air turned down so we all stay awake.
Well, good morning, everybody.
And let me begin with this first.
My thoughts and prayers go out and are with the victims of the anti-Semitic terrorist attack in Boulder, Colorado recently.
The Jewish people should absolutely not have to face this violence anywhere, let alone in the United States of America.
Recently, two young people were shot and killed in our nation's capital in an anti-Semitic attack.
And if that wasn't enough, Holocaust survivors are now actually being burned alive.
This is the outcome of everyone not condemning anti-Semitism everywhere, especially on our college campuses, which have become a breeding ground for vile hatred.
And failing to condemn these acts are the same as enabling these acts.
And the lack of consequences for those failing to condemn these acts has resulted in Jewish people dying.
Let me be clear on that.
Things have got to change.
Otherwise, I hate to say it, buckle up because that's not the last attack that we've seen.
And we haven't seen the last attack on college campuses, synagogues, or communities coming to a place in your community.
This type of anti-Semitic behavior needs to be dealt with and it needs to be dealt with swiftly.
And everyone, I'm going to repeat, needs to condemn this.
And what makes the attack in Boulder even worse is that it was committed by an illegal alien.
Wow, that's a shocker.
Who could have predicted that?
And I hate to say it, he might not be the only one plotting an attack.
Why?
Because under Biden, he let in tens of millions of illegal aliens.
So the risk is even greater.
Folks, this is a serious situation that we need to begin to deal with and deal with it swiftly.
And that's why the Senate must pass the one big beautiful bill.
Congress must give our law enforcement officers the resource they need to detain and deport violent illegal criminals.
Given this shocking news, Democrats spent Memorial Day in El Salvador honoring and remembering MS-13 instead of here in our country honoring Americans who actually paid the ultimate sacrifice.
I mean, honestly, what's next?
Is a Democrat going to fly to Boulder to visit the illegal who burned Jews alive?
Is that what's next for the Democratic Party?
The contrast between Republicans and Democrats couldn't be more clear.
Democrats stand with illegals.
House Republicans stand with the American people.
Democrats voted to raise taxes on hardworking Americans when not one Democrat voted for the Big Beautiful Bill.
House Republicans, on the other hand, voted to avoid the largest tax increase in history.
Democrats want your small businesses to close and for you to lose your jobs.
House Republicans want Main Street to thrive and survive and flourish.
When we passed the One Big Beautiful Act, we kept our promises.
Despite constant doubt, now we urge our colleagues in the Senate to pass this transformational legislation.
The American people can't wait any longer.
This is a critical piece of history that we must get done.
Now I want to turn it over to Rep. Mark Mesmer of Indiana, a member of the House Education and Workforce Committee, Armed Services, and Agriculture Committee.
Thank you.
unidentified
Thank you to House leadership for inviting me here to speak on the incredible success of the One Big Beautiful Bill.
House Republicans are committed to delivering the golden age President Trump promised the American people when he ran for office.
The reality is, because of the great investigatory work of Doge and the Trump administration have made public and our agriculture committee work in the House, there is actually far more fraud, waste, and abuse present in federal spending than anyone imagined.
What has been uncovered is appalling.
The One Big Beautiful Bill controls the growth of federal spending on SNAP and restores integrity to the bipartisan work requirements passed decades ago, protecting the SNAP program for those who truly need it.
For the first time ever, the bill holds states accountable for inaccurate benefit payments.
I believe our work marks a new era of efficiency and fairness by encourage modest state contributions.
I'm proud to say that the language passed on the House floor also includes historic investments in conservation to support the best stewards of our land, the American farmer.
The bill refuses to neglect rural America.
With incredible improvements to the farm safety net, our farmers will be supported as they bring healthy, safe, and affordable food to the kitchen tables of Americans.
What we passed in the House is both a lifeline to those who need it most and a promise to the American farmer that we cannot and will not take lightly the importance of their hard-earned contributions to our nation.
Thank you.
tom emmer
Thanks, Mark.
On Sunday afternoon, we witnessed yet another horrific anti-Semitic terrorist attack on U.S. soil.
While a peaceful group marched to call for the release of innocent hostages held by Hamas, an evil man launched a well-thought-out, deliberate attack, intending to kill, quote, all Zionist people, end quote.
As he threw Molotov cocktails into the crowd, he shouted, free Palestine.
As you've already heard, we need to be clear about this.
The violence we are seeing against the Jewish community here in America is a direct result of the left's refusal to condemn and combat anti-Semitism.
Sadly, this evil ideology has not only been tolerated by the left, it has been encouraged and enabled.
When rampant anti-Semitic behavior exploded on college campuses in the wake of October 7th, Joe Biden and the Democrats refused to hold these universities accountable.
Even sitting Democrat members of Congress regurgitated talking points from Hamas terrorists and normalized riots that do the same.
It's unacceptable.
To add insult to injury, the Colorado terrorist was, again, an illegal alien who was allowed in the United States by the Biden administration.
For four years, Joe Biden and the Democrats failed open border policies, welcomed unknown members of potential terrorists into our nation, setting the stage for scenarios like the one that we saw this week.
By letting millions of unvetted illegal aliens into our communities, the Biden administration left a national security mess, and the Trump administration is racing to clean it up.
Border security and deportation efforts are urgent.
Lives are at stake.
Our one big beautiful bill strengthens these efforts by providing additional funding for more deportations, more border patrol agents, and more border wall.
We're going to continue to work with the Senate to get this done for the American people.
And as we've said every week since we started this march, failure is not an option.
The safety of our communities depends on it.
With that, I turn it over to our leader.
steve scalise
Thank you, Whip.
We all mourn those who were the victims of these attacks here in Washington, D.C., as well as in Boulder, Colorado.
And it just unfortunately highlights this continued anti-Semitism we've seen around the country.
Last week I met with Jewish leaders, and they're understandably concerned about this trend that keeps going on.
It's been going on for years.
You know, you go back to October 7th, and ever since then, it's been a growing equivocation between almost trying to equivocate what the people who attacked and murdered Jews in Israel and Americans and kept hostages with those in Gaza who we've seen what Gaza's become and all of those who want to clean up Gaza.
President Trump's made it clear.
Prime Minister Netanyahu's made it clear.
They want to turn Gaza back into a place where you don't have to fear for your life that it's going to be a terrorist hotbed.
And yet there are people that want to sympathize with the very terrorists who want to continue to not only carry out evil against Israelis, but against people here in America and all across the globe.
It's got to stop.
We're going to continue to bring legislation on the House floor to address it.
Now, do want to talk about the one big beautiful bill.
This House came together in a way that maybe surprised some people here in Washington.
We've defied the odds every step of the way from the first vote on the budget to the second vote on the budget to final passage.
But there's a reason for that.
And as the whip just said, we've said all along: failure is not an option.
I've been asked by some in the press, what's plan B when there were reports that the bill was going to fail?
And we were very clear, and it wasn't just a talking point.
We said there is no plan B.
The American economy, the voters of this country, demanded that Congress deliver on the promises that President Trump made to get this country turned around.
And what we do, and this bill delivers on so many different fronts to help grow America's economy, to create jobs, to put more money in the pockets of hardworking families.
That's been the focus of this bill from the very beginning.
And I think there are some people that start reading too many Congressional Budget Office reports and ignore the lessons of history.
And there's an old saying that if you ignore the lessons of history, you're doomed to repeat it.
But I think it's important to go down that road of history and go back to 2017.
You don't need to go back that far to see how wrong the CBO has been when it comes time to make prognostications on economic growth.
They've always been wrong and they've always ignored what tax cuts will do to grow the American economy.
In 2017, when we started this process, when President Trump came in and said, we're going to make America competitive again, we were at a 35% corporate rate and we were losing jobs all across the globe.
Every month you'd see a great American company move to a foreign country and they would take the jobs along with them.
Millions of jobs were leaving America.
They were called inversions.
You don't maybe know that term as well anymore because we haven't had an inversion since we passed TCJA in 2017.
But if you go back, look at what CBO said about that bill.
They said it would cost a decrease in revenue to the tune of $1.5 trillion.
$1.5 trillion.
Now you go look at the numbers, they were off by more than $1.5 trillion because what they left out of that report, just like they're leaving it out again, CBO's making the same mistakes, they ignore economic growth.
What we saw in 2017 when we cut taxes is that businesses started growing.
They started giving pay raises to their workers.
They hired millions more people.
Unemployment went virtually to zero.
Inflation dropped dramatically.
People had more money in their pockets because wages were up.
And all of those things produced more money for the American Treasury.
It all happened, and yet CBO failed to recognize that.
And they're making the same mistake again.
And anybody who repeats CBO's analysis is also making those same mistakes.
If you ignore the growth that will come with keeping tax rates low, with helping businesses invest more in their workers, giving pay raises, putting more money in the pockets of waiters and waitresses, overtime workers not having to pay taxes on overtime, bonus depreciation, immediate expensing, all the things that will generate economic growth and ultimately put more money in the pockets of workers and send more money up to the federal treasury here in Washington.
CBO missed all of that in 2017 and they're missing it again this time.
That's the only way they come to a conclusion that it would increase the deficit.
This bill will actually reduce the deficit if you recognize the historical economic growth that has always been there.
To say you're going to get 1.8% growth at a minimum, we think you can get 2.5% to 4% growth.
Scott Besant, the Treasury Secretary, says over 4% economic growth.
So I get that we've got to play by the rules of the referee, but the referee's been wrong.
We've got a referee that tries to sack our quarterback a lot.
And yet we still manage to play by those rules and deliver for the American people.
Because when this bill is passed and signed into law, hopefully by July 4th, when the Senate does their work, you're going to see economic growth in this country like we haven't seen in generations, meaning more pay in the pockets of workers, and you're going to see more Treasury money coming in because of the growth in the American economy.
It's happened before and it will happen again.
We just need to keep moving forward.
And the Senate's got the bill now, and I'm confident they're going to move it on and ultimately back to us to the President's desk.
And finally, you saw yesterday, the White House sent the rescissions package.
This is the first maybe of many.
We are now putting that in bill format.
We'll file that bill hopefully by tomorrow and then bring it up to the floor quickly and get rid of more waste, fraud, and abuse in the federal government.
This will deal with, obviously, the abuses we all saw at USAID, NPR, and public broadcasting.
So those are the things that are going to be in this rescissions package.
We're going to continue working with President Trump to root out waste, fraud, and abuse and get the American economy turning around again.
And the person who's leading that charge is our speaker, Mike Johnson.
mike johnson
Thank you.
Rarely do I get to raise the podium, so let me do this for a second.
Great to see you all this morning.
Look, our leadership team had very much looked forward to this press conference, our weekly press conference with you today, because we wanted to celebrate this historic passage of our big, beautiful bill four days before Memorial Day, our self-imposed deadline.
And that's a big achievement, and I'll address it.
But obviously, our attention has been diverted and our mood very much dampened by these atrocities that continue against our Jewish friends and neighbors.
It's really something that's been discussed already this morning, but this attack over the weekend was actually the second time in three weeks that our country's witnessed these horrific acts of anti-Semitic terror here on American soil.
And it was just, of course, a few miles down the road, two Israeli embassy staffers, a young couple who had planned to wed soon, were senselessly gunned down on the street.
And the killer said when they asked him what his motivation was, he said, quote, he did it for Palestine.
This weekend, an Egyptian terrorist in Boulder, Colorado, Mohammed Soleiman, lit at least 12 Jewish people on fire.
They were at a parade, an event there.
He told police he wanted to kill every single one of them.
And you know what he said when he yelled out during the attack?
He said, free Palestine.
We also can't forget that in April, a terrorist burned the governor's mansion in Pennsylvania, attempting to kill Jewish Governor Josh Shapiro and his sleeping family inside.
Search warrants found that the terrorists targeted Shapiro because of, quote, perceived injustices against Palestine.
There's a theme here.
Why would terrorists target a young innocent couple or peaceful protesters or the governor of an American state with no jurisdiction over a war that's happening 5,000 miles away?
Because it isn't about Palestine.
It isn't about Gaza.
It isn't about any particular conflict.
It's because these people want a complete and total extermination of the Jewish people.
And there is a targeted left-wing anti-Semitic terror movement on the rise in America.
And we have to address this first and foremost.
The members of this institution and the media have a moral obligation to call this out.
We do not equivocate, as the leader said.
We do not both sides this issue at all.
This is very clear.
It's light versus darkness.
It is an evil that we are confronting.
And we'll continue to call it out, and the Trump administration and Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel will continue to pursue these anti-Semitic threats and actions against the Jewish people on our soil and to bring these violent criminals to justice.
And we will speak with moral clarity, and we will demand the same of all of our colleagues and both parties to do that.
And I hope they will.
According to DHS, Solomon, this criminal, this violent, sick individual that did this stuff over the weekend, applied for a tourist visa in 2022.
He applied for asylum.
He's been living in the U.S. on an expired visa since March of 2023.
If you apply Democrat logic to this case, Solomon was one of their constituents, as they say, and under their framing, he was just a Colorado man, right?
But when you see Democrats ramping up attacks on ICE agents and storming ICE detention facilities and calling for the dismantlement of ICE, just know that this is who they're defending.
This is the result.
Fortunately, President Trump has quickly slammed the borders shut by simply enforcing existing law, but this administration needs the resources to detain and process and deport the millions of dangerous illegals who President Biden welcomed into the country.
And this is why we need the One Big Beautiful Bill.
One of the many reasons for President Trump's desk as quickly as possible to sign into law because it, among the other features in the bill, it includes $45 billion to expand ICE detention capacity, $1 billion to hire 200 immigration judges and to expand immigration courtroom space.
There's $1 billion in there to hire 2,700 new ICE Office of Principal Legal Advisor attorneys to expedite removal proceedings, and $14 billion for air and ground transportation, sufficient to support at least 1 million removals per year.
We need to go find the other Solomons and get them out of America.
And that's what this bill will do.
We've got to get it signed into law as soon as possible.
Yesterday, the House, changing subjects here, the House did receive the rescissions package from the White House, and we are happy to receive it.
It's going to claw back $9.4 billion wasteful spending.
8.3 of that is in the foreign aid, USAID abuses area, and $1.1 billion from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
These are common sense cuts, and the American people are behind them.
I'll tell you why.
Just in the corporation of public broadcasting space, don't forget, the NPR refused to cover the Hunter Biden laptop story.
They repeatedly insisted that COVID-19 did not originate in a lab, and they ran stories defending looting during the summer of love, if you remember all that.
Its CEO admitted that she regards, quote, truth as a harmful, quote, distraction from NPR's objectives.
PBS produced a movie titled Real Boy, which celebrates a transgender teens transition.
This is all with taxpayer dollars.
PBS has featured drag queens in programming for little kids.
There is no reason for any media organization to be singled out to receive federal funds.
We're in a different era now, especially those that appear to have so little regard for the truth.
On the foreign aid front, we're cutting things like $6 million for net zero cities in Mexico, $4 million for sedentary migrants in Colombia, whatever that means, $3 million for Iraqi Sesame Street, $2 million for teaching young children how to make environmentally friendly reproductive health decisions.
We're not making this stuff up.
$1 million for voter ID in Haiti, Haiti, while they oppose voter ID here.
This rescissions package is the manifestation of the Doge effort, which has transformed the way American people view government, and it's going to ultimately ensure greater accountability in government going forward.
In addition to codifying the work of Elon Musk and Doge this week, the House will continue to codify the President's executive orders.
We've got three of those on the floor this week.
The list, real quick, Representative Beth Van Dine's American Entrepreneurs Act ensures taxpayer-funded loans go only to Americans, codifying President Trump's executive order to end taxpayers-subsidize open borders.
Representative Brad Finstead's Save SBA from Sanctuary Cities Act moves SBA offices out of sanctuary cities and into non-sanctuary municipalities.
It will codify President Trump's executive order to protect American communities from criminal aliens.
And the last one this week is Representative Rob Bresnahan's CEASE Act, which aligns with recent action taken by the Small Business Administration to restore oversight capabilities to the SBA by limiting the number of for-profit small business lending companies.
These are common sense provisions.
They deserve to be signed into law, and this is a continuing series of things that we've signed into law, executive orders.
There are many more to come.
And you'll see the House continue that effort in earnest this week.
Let me take a few questions.
I can guess what they'll be.
unidentified
Chad.
How can you explain the fact that Republicans voted for this interim spending bill back in March, greenlighting this money?
And two, three months later, then you want to take back that money.
mike johnson
That seems inconsistent.
Well, if you're talking about, for example, this USAID money and this kind of stuff.
unidentified
That was approved in the CR back then.
mike johnson
Yeah, yeah, it was.
And here's the point.
It's a critical point.
When I met with Elon in his office back in early February, he had just gotten into it.
They were just uncovering the USAID abuses.
And they went after USAID first for their review, their audits, because USAID screamed the loudest, opposed the loudest this accountability measure.
And so they effectively put the scrutiny target on their own backs.
And Elon and I were in his office late one night.
We were talking about this, and I said he had just started, he had finished USAID.
They were just starting on Social Security.
And he was finding all these abuses.
And we were talking, and he and I were getting increasingly excited together about this new era of accountability.
And it occurred to me we were excited for different reasons.
And I said, you know, Elon, you're excited because you're looking at this as a data analyst and a scientist.
And I'm looking at it as a constitutional law attorney and a legislator and a novice historian, right?
But like, this is about more than saving money.
This is about restoring the framers' original vision for the Constitution.
The framers of our magnificent form of government, our matchless Constitution, what they envisioned, and in fact, what they designed was a small, lean federal government.
They wanted most of the power reserved for the states, for the people at a local level, closer to the people because there's more accountability and efficiency.
And so the Doge effort, overall, what it does is it restores the framers' vision because what Elon was able to do, what he's been able to do, what Doge is able to do, its lasting legacy, is they crack the code.
They got inside the belly of the beast.
He was inside the bureaucracy of the agencies with his algorithms, crawling, finding all the irregularities and the abuses.
He did something we had never been able to do before, Chad, not as long as I've been in Congress in nine years and not for decades.
I told Elon that night, I said, you're doing something that we were not capable of doing.
We've tried to perform our oversight responsibility, but Congress has not been able to get the things that uncover the abuses that you found.
We didn't know we were funding transgender operas in Peru, obviously, right?
Like, we would have stopped that.
But our committees did their diligent work.
They've done oversight.
They've had hearings with the heads of the bureaucratic agencies, the executive agencies.
Subpoenas have been issued.
But never did they turn over this level of data and this level of detail.
It was unknowable to us until now.
And so, yes, we can't act fast enough on these rescissions to claw back these abuses because it happened without Congress's knowledge.
And that's a really important thing to point to.
And look, you give credit where credit is due, and I credit Elon and the Doge effort for doing that.
unidentified
Doesn't that undercut Congress?
I mean, if that was Congress, I understand the uniqueness of his situation.
mike johnson
Yeah, but what it's going to do, the lasting legacy of this, and the reason it's so important, the reason they deserve accolades, is because they have done a reset in Washington.
Now, everybody knows what the abuse is, not just Congress, but the American people.
And we'll be able to demand and ensure greater accountability going forward.
And that is a huge innovation.
unidentified
Elon Musk was sort of making, alluding to electoral threats against Republicans who voted for the big, beautiful bill.
I mean, you spent $290 million in the 2024 election.
How much of a threat is this to keeping the majority in 2024?
mike johnson
Look, let me just address the Elon controversy and tell you that I consider Elon a friend.
He's obviously brilliant.
I just told you we credit him with all the big changes with Doge and everything else.
It's curious to me what happened this week.
And I just, I mean, full disclosure, Elon and I had a great conversation about a half hour long talk on Monday, this week, Monday morning.
And we talked about the Big Beautiful Bill because I think he was trying to make a joke a couple of days earlier.
It can't be big and beautiful.
And I started the conversation.
Oh, yes, it can, my friend.
It's very beautiful.
So we talked about all the record level of savings.
My friends, no government in the history of mankind has ever cut $1.6 trillion in a piece of legislation.
We're doing that here.
I mean, the extraordinary level of savings and the historic level of tax cuts at the same time and all these great policy prescriptions.
And I talked Elon through all that and explained to him what we're doing and that this is just the beginning of a long process of making government more efficient and effective, of cutting wasteful spending, fraud and abuse.
And you can't do it all in one bill.
It took Congress decades to get to this situation.
It's going to take us a little while to get out of it.
But we have a very specific plan to do that.
And Elon was encouraged by that conversation.
We had a great, it was a very friendly, very fruitful conversation together.
And he and I talked about the midterm elections.
And he said, I'm going to help.
We've got to make sure that the Republicans keep the House majority.
We can't have the President impeached, which is what the Democrats would do on day one, as we all well know.
And we've got to continue this.
The Trump administration needs four years to do all this reform, not two years.
The Biden administration, Biden Harris, made such a disaster of every metric of public policy, it's going to take us more than one bill to fix it all.
Elon and I left on a great note.
We were texting one another, you know, happy text Monday.
And then yesterday, 24 hours later, he does a 180 and he comes out and opposed the bill.
And it surprised me, frankly.
And I don't take it personal.
We don't take it personal.
Policy differences are not personal.
I think he's flat wrong.
I think he's way off on this.
And I've told him as much, and I've said it publicly and privately.
I'm very consistent in that.
But am I concerned about the effect of this on the midterms?
I'm not.
Let me tell you why.
Because when the Big Beautiful Bill is done and signed into law, every single American is going to do better.
This bill is geared for middle and working class Americans, and they are going to feel the effects of it.
And they're going to feel it before the midterm election.
So I have no concern whatsoever.
I'm absolutely convinced that we're going to win the midterms and grow the House majority because we're delivering for the American people and fulfilling our campaign promises.
And we'll see how that happens.
Second row, Robert, kiss me.
unidentified
What is a second reconciliation package?
What would be in that second package once we get to it?
mike johnson
You know, I'm not going to tell you that this morning.
Great question.
Yeah, let's get the first one done.
Leader has been around Washington a while.
Look, I said this is the beginning of a process, and what you're going to see is a continuing theme of us identifying waste, fraud, and abuse in government, which is our pledge of common sense, restoring common sense, and fiscal sanity.
So we have lots of ideas of things that might be in that package.
But as you know, for the first reconciliation package, for the Big Beautiful Bill, we worked on this for about 14 months.
I mean, this isn't something we just drew up overnight.
So we'll go through that same laborious process, and it'll be fruitful in the end, and we'll do right by the American people.
Front row.
unidentified
Mr. Speaker, you mentioned that you talked to Elon on Monday, made this 180.
What do you think changed?
Why do you think he's coming out against this now?
And have you spoken to the President and Elon since the impamus?
mike johnson
Well, I'll tell you, I called Elon last night and he didn't answer.
But I hope to talk to him today.
I mean, it's not, you know, it's very friendly, and we've laughed about our differences on policy before.
I'm not upset about this.
And I just think he understands, and he's acknowledged to me before, that this is so serious that we can't fool around with it.
I mean, the debt cliff is approaching very quickly, right?
All the things that are in this bill are so important for the U.S. economy.
It's going to be jet fuel for the U.S. economy.
All boats are going to rise.
And the sooner we do that, the better.
And the risk of not getting it done is enormous, not just for the Republican Party, but for the country.
We've got to do this.
We're going to have the largest tax increase in U.S. history at the end of the year if we fail, and all the other calamities that we've talked about.
So we've got to get it done.
And I think Elon understands the weight of that.
And I hope he comes around.
I'd love to talk to him this week and hope he calls him back today.
I talked to President Trump all the time, multiple times a day.
Obviously, we've talked about this.
As you know, he's not delighted that Elon did a 180 on that.
But look, I don't know what happened in 24 hours.
Everybody can draw their own conclusions about that, okay?
But I look forward to talking to my friend about it again, and I'm not upset about it.
unidentified
All right?
mike johnson
Yeah.
Olivia.
unidentified
I've talked about EV mandates when you were talking about must-hasting.
Did you talk about what you think is his motivation for opposing the bill?
mike johnson
Manu brought up EV mandates, not me, okay?
And I said that everybody can draw their own conclusions about that.
Look, I'm not, I don't subscribe motive to anybody.
I try not to do that.
It's a good way to live.
I just believe that we've got to do the right thing by way of policy.
And I hope everybody understands.
They might not think the bill is perfect in some respect.
I mean, a bill that's 1,100 pages long, it covers every area of policy and the budget that ours does.
You know, very few people are going to say that's a perfect piece of legislation.
But I hope everybody will evaluate that in both parties and everybody and recognize: wow, the benefits of this far outweigh anything that I don't like about it.
And that's why we're excited about it.
And I hope our mood is not dampened next time we're together because we're going to celebrate this thing, getting over the line by July 4th.
Thank y'all.
Appreciate it.
unidentified
Mr. President, no doubt about it.
This is day is historic in many ways.
The proceedings of the United States Senate are being broadcast to the nation on television for the first time.
This week, we mark the 39th anniversary of the U.S. Senate's first live television broadcast on C-SPAN 2.
Join us as senators take to the floor to reflect on this landmark moment in American democracy.
chuck grassley
Thanks to C-SPAN 2, this public service allows our constituents to see the swearing in of newly elected members, watching all-night sessions during Votoramas, and tune in to history being made.
amy klobuchar
That's why on its 39th birthday, Senator Grassy and I wanted to highlight how important it is for all television providers, including major streaming services like YouTube TV owned by Google and Hulu Plus Live TV owned by Disney, to provide the American public with C-SPAN and the opportunity to see their government work on the Senate floor.
chuck grassley
C-SPAN does not receive one penny of taxpayer dollars.
It's funded primarily from satellite and cable providers.
amy klobuchar
We're at a different stage in our history and a lot of people are seeing their news this way, so we need to expand it and make sure we're on all of those platforms as well as the ones we already are on.
So thank you again to Senator Grassley for working with me to highlight C-SPAN's critical role and thanks to everyone who has had a hand in C-SPAN's success.
Happy birthday.
unidentified
C-SPAN 2, 39 years of bringing the U.S. Senate live into homes across the country.
Thanks to the support of our cable partners.
Together, we bring you democracy unfiltered.
C-SPAN, democracy unfiltered.
We're funded by these television companies and more, including Charter Communications.
Charter is proud to be recognized as one of the best internet providers.
And we're just getting started, building 100,000 miles of new infrastructure to reach those who need it most.
Charter Communications supports C-SPAN as a public service, along with these other television providers, giving you a front-row seat to democracy.
Senate Republican leadership spoke about the Trump GOP tax and spending legislation outside of the White House shortly after meeting with President Trump to discuss the legislation.
Good afternoon, everyone.
We all want to thank the President and his team for hosting us down here.
john thune
We had a very positive discussion about the path forward on the Big Beautiful Bill on the reconciliation bill.
unidentified
And I think it was a reminder that we are all in this together.
john thune
This is a team effort, and everybody is going to be rolling in the same direction to get this across the finish line.
Failure is not an option, and we intend to deliver along with the President for the American people on the things that he committed to do and that we committed to do in terms of the agenda.
unidentified
And so the reconciliation bill will be positive for growth.
It'll be good for the economy.
It'll create better paying jobs.
john thune
And we intend on energy, on national security, on spending reductions, on tax policy, on border security, all of those areas to address the issues the American people care about to make them more safe, more secure, and more prosperous in the future.
unidentified
Senator Barross.
Sorry.
john barrasso
Well, Republicans are committed to a safe and prosperous America.
And that's what this bill does.
It provides for safety as well as prosperity for the American people.
We shared with the President the fact that the American people trust Republicans much more on the economy than they do the Democrats.
And this bill does what the American people want us to do.
And the number one and most important thing is that this bill prevents a $4 trillion tax increase, which would be the largest tax increase in the history of the country.
Democrats want that tax increase to come into place.
Republicans are going to stop it.
Additionally, I'm a doctor, took care of patients for a long, long time, took care of many, many patients on Medicaid.
We need to strengthen Medicaid for the people that it's designed to take care of.
And that means we have to stop paying, taxpayers need to stop paying for Medicaid for illegal immigrants.
We're going to unleash American energy.
All of these things are going to lower costs, increase wages, and put more money into people's pockets.
mike crapo
As has been said, we had a very, very robust and helpful discussion with the president today.
Everyone was able to get their concerns voiced and their hopes identified.
unidentified
We have very strong support and we have very strong unity in moving forward to make sure that we don't give America the biggest tax increase in the history of the country.
A $4.3 trillion tax increase.
There's a lot of talk about this as a tax cut for the wealthy.
mike crapo
This is a $2.6 trillion tax increase on people making less than $400,000.
unidentified
And the vast majority of that is for the middle and lower middle income categories.
mike crapo
And small businesses and large businesses alike are looking to invest capital in America and increase the growth rate of our economy.
You're seeing that kind of investment already happen in anticipation of this bill.
So all the talk about how this bill is going to generate a reduction or an increase in our deficit is absolutely wrong.
The fact is we're going to see the same dynamic develop after this bill is passed that we saw in 27 when we passed the bill, and that is the economy is going to explode in capital formation, jobs will increase, wages will increase, benefits will increase, and unemployment will go down, as will inflation.
unidentified
And we're going to see the kind of growth and strength that this country wants to be delivered from this legislation.
Can I ask you, Senator, did SOLD come up, Senator Thune?
I mean, this is a big issue.
You gave that interview.
And is the president with you on reopening up the SOLD conversation?
SALT always comes up.
john thune
It's an issue that there's a lot of passion for and about among Republican senators.
unidentified
Obviously, the House has different equities when it comes to that issue.
But we'll work it out.
I mean, we obviously realize that anything we do also has to pass the House of Representatives.
It's got to be something that the President's willing to sign into law.
john thune
And I think the President understands the dynamic in both the House and the Senate and why it was necessary to do something on SALT in the House.
unidentified
And we also understand that we're going to have to probably do something there.
john thune
But we also start from a position that there really isn't a single Republican senator who cares much about the SALT issue.
unidentified
It's just not an issue that plays.
Most of our states, we're states that are low-tax states, and we don't think that low-tax states ought to be subsidizing high-tax states.
john thune
So as a matter of policy, in my view, I think we would all agree in 2017 that was one of the best reforms we had in the bill.
unidentified
But we understand that it's about 51 and 218.
john thune
So we will work with our House counterparts and with the White House to try and get that issue in a place where we can deliver the votes and get the bill across the finish line.
unidentified
Why do you sit up the bill, Senator Thunder?
Why Elon Musk will sign it on this bill?
Why do you think Elon Musk is trying to kill this bill?
Well, I can't speak to his reasons other than what he stated.
And I think that what he stated was that he thought it was something that would add to the deficit.
And we believe the opposite.
john thune
We believe that if you don't, if you take the CBO assumptions, which were dramatically off when it came to the 2017 tax bill, but if you take pretty much everybody else's economic modeling and you realize there's going to be growth as a result of passing this bill, that growth generates additional government revenue.
unidentified
And over time, you end up not increasing the deficit, but reducing the deficit.
Well, I think our members understand kind of the whole CBO scoring model game here in Washington.
john thune
So I think at the end of the day, most of our members want to pass a bill that they believe is going to be stimulative, that's going to create growth in the economy, create better paying jobs, and therefore generate more government revenue, not less.
unidentified
Senator, did you talk about the religious package for President Trump?
Just to follow up on that, Elon Musk said today that the bill should be killed and that you should start all over.
Are you saying that that's not going to happen?
john thune
No, I mean we're a long ways down this track and we realize that this is a bill that the House spent a lot of time analyzing.
We spent, I think we've said we've had like 18 different meetings now with the Senate Finance Committee and we're committed to making a law that will make the lives of the American people better.
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