Thursday, July 3, 2025

Something to Know - 3 July

There is a tense atmosphere in Congress over the pass or fail of the House on the BBB.   It is now being waged partially on the floor of the legislature, but mostly via phone calls, arm twisting, and smoke-filled back rooms.   This is where it gets pretty scary.   Trump has his bullyness and his love of lies, plus a stash of millions of dollars in his own pocket to bribe anyone he wants to vote his way.   I know, it is not ethical to bribe, but since when is Trump ethical?   On the other hand, private citizen Musk is apparently offering his billions to tug in the opposite direction.   Do we acknowledge that the political operation of our government operates like Mr.Smith going to Washington, or is it like the non-ethical behavior system of the Mafia?   Our system of government runs on cash, not idealism.  We will have the next few hours or days to see for sure.   The Constitution is not a document of ethics, where as the Declaration of Independence is.   The Constitution is the plan on how the government is to work.   We make laws to determine what is legal and illegal.   The laws are made by Congress, and the president is supposed to enforce the laws, and the Supreme Court will determine the legality of the laws.    Trump holds all the cards.   He would like to control every lever of power so that come election time, he can remove the power of the ballot with his martial law.


Heather Cox Richardson from Letters from an American heathercoxrichardson@substack.com 
Unsubscribe

Jul 2, 2025, 11:17 PM (8 hours ago)
to me
Forwarded this email? Subscribe here for more

The Senate's passage of its version of the budget reconciliation bill yesterday sent House members rushing back to Washington today to debate passing what the Senate had sent them. The bill is hugely unpopular. It cuts taxes for the wealthiest Americans and corporations and slashes Medicaid, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, energy credits, and other programs that help the American people, while also pouring money into Immigration and Customs Enforcement and detention facilities for migrants.

While Democratic representatives are united against the measure, people from across the country are flooding lawmakers with calls and demonstrations against the bill in hopes of swaying Republicans. At the office of Representative Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA), hundreds of his constituents held a die-in to demonstrate how cuts to healthcare in the bill would affect them.

Far-right Republicans think the bill doesn't make steep enough cuts; Republicans from swing districts recognize that supporting it will badly hurt both their constituents and their hopes of reelection. But Trump has demanded Congress pass the measure before July 4, an arbitrary date he seems to have chosen because of its historical significance.

A new element in the Republicans' calculation emerged a few days ago as billionaire Elon Musk reentered the fight over the measure, warning he would start a new political party over it. He has threatened to run primary challengers against lawmakers who vote yes, a threat that is a counterweight to Trump's threat to run primary challengers against lawmakers who vote no. Already Musk has claimed to be donating to the reelection campaign of Representative Thomas Massie (R-KY), an outspoken opponent of the bill.

Representative Sean Casten (D-IL) wrote today about the dysfunction on the House floor. "A functioning House leadership team would work the members, make changes as necessary and bring this bill to the floor once they knew they could pass it. But [speaker] Mike Johnson does not run a functional House leadership team. He does what Daddy says and Daddy said pass it before July 4." This morning, the House took a procedural vote, but recognizing that they did not have the votes to pass the bill itself, Republican leadership refused to close the vote.

Later, House leadership held another vote open for more than two hours when they could not win it. When Representative Joe Neguse (D-CO) challenged this trick, the chair told him that the rules established a minimum time for votes, but no maximum.

To find the votes Republicans need to pass the bill, Trump met today with those expected to vote no. Riley Rogerson and Reese Gorman of NOTUS reported that at a meeting with some of the swing-state Republican holdouts, Trump seemed to believe the lie that the bill doesn't cut Medicaid. Three sources told the reporters Trump told Republicans they shouldn't touch Medicaid, Medicare, or Social Security if they want to win elections. "But we're touching Medicaid in this bill," one of the members at the meeting answered.

Trump also met with far-right members, but because the Senate measure must pass the House unchanged, he can offer them little except to promise they will fix the bill after it passes. While that appeared to work on at least one representative, Representative Tim Burchett (R-TN) told the NOTUS reporters: "Now we're having to once again hear the line, 'Let's pass this and then we'll fix it later,' And we never fix it later, and America knows that."

Political journalist Judd Legum of Popular Information posted: "To review: Trump spent all day rounding up votes for his mega bill[.] Trump did not round up enough votes[.] So the 'plan' was just to start voting and bully anyone who votes no until they switch their vote[.] (It could work.)"

Democrats called out Republicans from swing districts, listing the numbers of their constituents who will lose healthcare insurance if the measure passes. They urged Republicans to stand up to Donald Trump, and to stand up for their constituents.

Pennsylvania representative Fitzpatrick faced the die-in at his office and was also so angry at today's news Trump is withholding weapons already pledged to Ukraine that he wrote to Trump today, warning that Ukraine is "holding the line for the entire democratic world" and asking for an emergency briefing on the decision to withhold aid. He voted no on a key procedural vote tonight.

Just after 10:00 tonight, NBC News Capitol Hill correspondent Melanie Zanona reported: "Republicans are trying [to] locate Rep[resentative] Brian Fitzpatrick, who delivered a surprising NO vote on the mega bill rule. Likely to try to flip him. I told a member I saw him bolt out of the chamber & leave the area. 'Smart,' the member said."

As of midnight, the Republicans did not have the votes to advance the measure.

Representative Maxwell Frost (D-FL) posted: "Speaker Johnson should just take the L on this vote. Most of America doesn't want this bill to pass anyways. It's…both the worst and most unpopular piece of legislation in modern history."

On Bluesky, user shauna wrote: "say what you will about [former Democratic House speaker] nancy pelosi (as one of her constituents believe me i have) she'd have impaled herself with a gavel live on the house floor before she'd have allowed this sh*tshow of a vote on her watch as speaker."




Heather Cox Richardson from Letters from an American heathercoxrichardson@substack.com 
Unsubscribe

Jul 2, 2025, 11:17 PM (8 hours ago)
to me
Forwarded this email? Subscribe here for more

The Senate's passage of its version of the budget reconciliation bill yesterday sent House members rushing back to Washington today to debate passing what the Senate had sent them. The bill is hugely unpopular. It cuts taxes for the wealthiest Americans and corporations and slashes Medicaid, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, energy credits, and other programs that help the American people, while also pouring money into Immigration and Customs Enforcement and detention facilities for migrants.

While Democratic representatives are united against the measure, people from across the country are flooding lawmakers with calls and demonstrations against the bill in hopes of swaying Republicans. At the office of Representative Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA), hundreds of his constituents held a die-in to demonstrate how cuts to healthcare in the bill would affect them.

Far-right Republicans think the bill doesn't make steep enough cuts; Republicans from swing districts recognize that supporting it will badly hurt both their constituents and their hopes of reelection. But Trump has demanded Congress pass the measure before July 4, an arbitrary date he seems to have chosen because of its historical significance.

A new element in the Republicans' calculation emerged a few days ago as billionaire Elon Musk reentered the fight over the measure, warning he would start a new political party over it. He has threatened to run primary challengers against lawmakers who vote yes, a threat that is a counterweight to Trump's threat to run primary challengers against lawmakers who vote no. Already Musk has claimed to be donating to the reelection campaign of Representative Thomas Massie (R-KY), an outspoken opponent of the bill.

Representative Sean Casten (D-IL) wrote today about the dysfunction on the House floor. "A functioning House leadership team would work the members, make changes as necessary and bring this bill to the floor once they knew they could pass it. But [speaker] Mike Johnson does not run a functional House leadership team. He does what Daddy says and Daddy said pass it before July 4." This morning, the House took a procedural vote, but recognizing that they did not have the votes to pass the bill itself, Republican leadership refused to close the vote.

Later, House leadership held another vote open for more than two hours when they could not win it. When Representative Joe Neguse (D-CO) challenged this trick, the chair told him that the rules established a minimum time for votes, but no maximum.

To find the votes Republicans need to pass the bill, Trump met today with those expected to vote no. Riley Rogerson and Reese Gorman of NOTUS reported that at a meeting with some of the swing-state Republican holdouts, Trump seemed to believe the lie that the bill doesn't cut Medicaid. Three sources told the reporters Trump told Republicans they shouldn't touch Medicaid, Medicare, or Social Security if they want to win elections. "But we're touching Medicaid in this bill," one of the members at the meeting answered.

Trump also met with far-right members, but because the Senate measure must pass the House unchanged, he can offer them little except to promise they will fix the bill after it passes. While that appeared to work on at least one representative, Representative Tim Burchett (R-TN) told the NOTUS reporters: "Now we're having to once again hear the line, 'Let's pass this and then we'll fix it later,' And we never fix it later, and America knows that."

Political journalist Judd Legum of Popular Information posted: "To review: Trump spent all day rounding up votes for his mega bill[.] Trump did not round up enough votes[.] So the 'plan' was just to start voting and bully anyone who votes no until they switch their vote[.] (It could work.)"

Democrats called out Republicans from swing districts, listing the numbers of their constituents who will lose healthcare insurance if the measure passes. They urged Republicans to stand up to Donald Trump, and to stand up for their constituents.

Pennsylvania representative Fitzpatrick faced the die-in at his office and was also so angry at today's news Trump is withholding weapons already pledged to Ukraine that he wrote to Trump today, warning that Ukraine is "holding the line for the entire democratic world" and asking for an emergency briefing on the decision to withhold aid. He voted no on a key procedural vote tonight.

Just after 10:00 tonight, NBC News Capitol Hill correspondent Melanie Zanona reported: "Republicans are trying [to] locate Rep[resentative] Brian Fitzpatrick, who delivered a surprising NO vote on the mega bill rule. Likely to try to flip him. I told a member I saw him bolt out of the chamber & leave the area. 'Smart,' the member said."

As of midnight, the Republicans did not have the votes to advance the measure.

Representative Maxwell Frost (D-FL) posted: "Speaker Johnson should just take the L on this vote. Most of America doesn't want this bill to pass anyways. It's…both the worst and most unpopular piece of legislation in modern history."

On Bluesky, user shauna wrote: "say what you will about [former Democratic House speaker] nancy pelosi (as one of her constituents believe me i have) she'd have impaled herself with a gavel live on the house floor before she'd have allowed this sh*tshow of a vote on her watch as speaker."




--
****
Juan Matute
The Harold Wilke House 
Claremont, California

Humpty Trumpty Shat on His Wall



No comments:

Post a Comment