Efforts to win over holdout House Republicans extend into early hours as Trumpโs tax and spending bill hits hurdles.
Republicans in the United States House of Representatives have been locked in a dramatic impasse over President Donald Trumpโs signature tax and spending package, as a rebel group of lawmakers failed to support the bill that all Democratic representatives oppose.
The standoff over the Trump administrationโs flagship domestic policy package, dubbed the One Big Beautiful Bill, stretched into the early hours of Thursday, as the Republican leadership worked furiously to try to persuade holdouts to send the bill to Trumpโs desk by a Friday, July 4 deadline, US Independence Day, while Trump railed against the rebels on social media.
โFor Republicans, this should be an easy yes vote. Ridiculous!โ he posted on his Truth Social platform.
โLargest Tax Cuts in History and a Booming Economy vs. Biggest Tax Increase in History, and a Failed Economy. What are the Republicans waiting for?โ he added, threatening that โMAGA is not happy, and itโs costing you votes.โ
Five Republicans voted โnoโ in the procedural vote to advance the legislation, while eight have yet to cast a vote.
Assuming all Democratic members cast a vote against the bill, Trump can afford to lose only three Republican votes if it is to advance to a final vote.
Centrepiece legislation
The hefty 800-page bill, the centrepiece of the presidentโs domestic agenda, combines sweeping tax cuts, spending hikes on defence and border security, and cuts to social safety nets into one giant package.
But it faces opposition within Trumpโs Republican Party, with moderate critics expressing concern about its cuts to social safety-net programmes like Medicaid, and conservatives baulking at the trillions it is likely to add to the national debt.
Five Republicans voted against the bill: representatives Victoria Spartz of Indiana, Andrew Clyde of Georgia, Keith Self of Texas, Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, and Thomas Massie of Kentucky.
House Speaker Mike Johnson had summoned lawmakers to Washington for a roll call vote, in a bid to capitalise on the momentum of the billโs passage a day earlier in the Senate and win House approval ahead of the July 4 national holiday.
Lawmakers had passed the bill by a 51 to 50 vote in the Republican-controlled chamber on Tuesday, after Vice President JD Vance broke the tie.
But the risky gambit to hold the roll call vote swiftly hit hurdles, with some Republican lawmakers resisting the request to rubber stamp the Senate version of the bill so soon after it passed.
โBad bill to enrich those who are already richโ
Johnson said he would keep voting open โas long as it takesโ, as senior Republicans attempted to persuade holdouts to support the bill.
He said he believed that the Republican holdouts were โgoing to come on boardโ, and expected to proceed to a final vote on the legislation in the early hours of Thursday morning, The New York Times reported.
As Republicans remain deadlocked, Democrats ramped up their criticisms of the policy package. In a video message posted on social media, Representative Chuy Garcia described the legislation as a โbad bill to enrich those who are already richโ.
Itโs past midnight in DC and Republicans are still trying to rip healthcare and food from working families to give tax breaks to billionaires. Call your Republican representative and tell them to vote HELL NO pic.twitter.com/IfyXFdSaqs
โ Congressman Chuy Garcรญa (@RepChuyGarcia) July 3, 2025
So far, 217 House Representatives have voted against advancing the legislation, including five Republicans, while 207 are in favour.
Members can change their vote until voting closes, and eight Republicans have yet to vote. The bill needs 218 votes to advance.


