Donald Trump’s signature tax-and-spending bill appears on the verge of passing the US House of Representatives, after the Democratic minority leader, Hakeem Jeffries, delivered a record-breaking address in a fruitless effort to stop its passage.
Jeffries condemned the bill in a floor speech that began on Thursday morning and lasted for eight hours and 44 minutes, breaking the previous record set by the former top Republican Kevin McCarthy, when he spoke against Joe Biden’s agenda in 2021.
“Shame on this institution. If this bill passes, that’s not America. We’re better than this,” Jeffries said.
Cheering Democrats surrounded him after he finished his speech, but it amounted to a delay tactic that was not expected to have any material impact on the plans of the Republican speaker, Mike Johnson, to imminently pass the bill. Overnight, Johnson managed to sway the final Republican holdouts against the measure and open debate, setting the stage for a final vote for passage on Thursday afternoon.
“We’ve waited long enough, some of us have literally been up for days now, but this day, this day is a hugely important one in the history of our nation. We have a big job to finish,” Johnson said after Jeffries finished his speech.
Trump has demanded that the legislation, known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, be on his desk by Friday, the Independence Day holiday. It passed the Senate earlier this week, and the president spent much of Wednesday holding meetings and phone calls with skeptical Republican lawmakers in the House.
“What are the Republicans waiting for??? What are you trying to prove??? MAGA IS NOT HAPPY, AND IT’S COSTING YOU VOTES!!!” he wrote early on Thursday morning, as the holdouts prevented the bill from advancing in the House.
The chamber had begun taking procedural votes on the bill on Wednesday, but it became a tortuous process, with one kept open for more than seven hours, making it the longest vote in the history of the House of Representatives.
The vice-president, JD Vance, cast the tie-breaking vote to get it through the Senate on Tuesday after an all-night session in which a record number of amendments were proposed.
Now the House must approve the version passed by the Senate, which Johnson has acknowledged “went a little further than many of us would have preferred” in its changes, particularly to Medicaid, a programme that provides healthcare to low-income and disabled Americans.
As he headed to the floor for a vote to begin debate, Johnson told reporters: “We’re in a good place right now. This is the legislative process, this is exactly how I think the framers intended for it to work.”
Congressman Keith Self of Texas briefly joined with other conservatives in halting the bill’s progress. He criticised the legislation for failing to save enough money, curb green energy incentives or crack down on transgender rights.
Self wrote on X: “The Senate broke the House framework, and then they stomped all over it. Now, House leadership wants to cram this broken bill down our throats by rushing it to the floor while in the middle of discussions, completely disregarding their promises.” However, he later voted to begin debate on the bill.
The House rules committee advanced the measure early on Wednesday morning, sending it to the floor for consideration and prompting lawmakers to flock back to the Capitol.
“I think these votes will take a little bit or a lot longer than usual. But that’s Washington. You guys are watching how the sausage is made, and that’s how business is run,” said the congresswoman Nancy Mace.
Like several other members, Mace had to drive from her South Carolina district to Washington after a flurry of thunderstorms on Tuesday prompted big flight delays and cancellations around the capital.
Smoking a cigar, Congressman Troy Nehls of Texas said: “There’s things in the bill I don’t like, but would I change the bill because I didn’t get what I wanted? I don’t think that would be good for America.”
after newsletter promotion
The House approved an initial draft of the legislation in May by a single vote, overcoming unanimous opposition from the Democrats. But many fiscal conservatives are furious over cost estimates that project the Senate version would add even more to the federal deficit than the House-passed plan.
The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office estimates that the bill in its current form would add $3.3tn (£2.4tn) to the US budget deficit through 2034.
Johnson’s wafer-thin Republican majority risks losing decisive votes from rightwing fiscal hardliners demanding steep spending cuts, moderates wary of dismantling safety-net programmes and Republicans from Democratic-led states expected to make a stand on a contentious tax provision. Any one of these groups could derail the bill’s passage through a chamber where the GOP can afford to lose no more than three votes.
Trump celebrated the Senate’s passage of the bill as “music to my ears”. He has described the bill as crucial to his second-term agenda, and congressional Republicans made it their top priority.
It will extend tax cuts enacted during the president’s first term in 2017, and includes new provisions to cut taxes on tips, overtime and interest payments for some car loans. It funds Trump’s plans for mass deportations by allocating $45bn for Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facilities, $14bn for deportation operations and billions of dollars more to hire an additional 10,000 new agents by 2029.
It also includes more than $50bn for the construction of border fortifications, which will probably include a wall along the border with Mexico.
To satisfy demands from fiscal conservatives for cuts to the US’s large federal budget deficit, the bill imposes new work requirements on enrollees of Medicaid. It also imposes a limit on the provider tax states use to fund their programme, which could lead to reductions in services. Finally, it sunsets some incentives for green-energy technologies created by Congress under Joe Biden.
In a floor speech on Wednesday, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a Democrat from New York, said: “This bill is a deal with the devil. It explodes our national debt. It militarises our entire economy and it strips away healthcare and basic dignity of the American people.
“For what? To give Elon Musk a tax break and billionaires, the greedy, taking of our nation. We cannot stand for it and we will not support it. You should be ashamed.”
The speaker emerita, Nancy Pelosi, said of the policy bill: “Well, if beauty is in the eye of the beholder then you, GOP, you have a very blurred vision of what America is about. Is it beautiful to cut off food from seniors and children? Is it beautiful to cut off 17 million people from healthcare? Is it beautiful to do this? To give tax cuts to billionaires in our country? Is it beautiful to take money from education and the rest? The list goes on and on.”