Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) says he expects the House to pass President Trump's fiscal agenda by Memorial Day, while the White House and Senate GOP leader John Thune (R-S.D.) have circled July 4 for final passage.
Trump on Tuesday described passage of passage of the bill as his next top priority.
"The next period of time, I think, my biggest focus will be on Congress, the deal that we're working on," he said. "That would be the biggest bill in the history of our country in terms of tax cuts and regulation cuts, and other things."
House committees will begin their markups this week, putting meat onto the bones of the budget frameworks passed by Congress earlier this year.
It's a tough assignment, with the GOP's slim margins in both chambers requiring near-universal Republican support for "one big, beautiful" bill to make Trump's tax cuts permanent and to reduce the federal deficit by making some painful spending cuts.
Republicans have already received blowback as they kick around ideas for how to reduce spending on Medicaid and other social safety net programs that make up the bulk of the federal budget.
Mehmet Oz, who leads the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), said Tuesday Trump told him to "love and cherish" Medicare, even as he's been instructed find waste, fraud and abuse in the nation's health programs.
Democrats are watching closely and will be documenting all cuts to popular programs.
Top Democratic funding negotiators Tuesday published a tracker Tuesday documenting federal funding blocked under Trump, which they say amounts to $430 billion so far.
MEANWHILE...
House Republicans on Tuesday used a procedural maneuver to block Democrats from forcing votes on the Trump administration's use of Signal, potential conflicts of interest involving Elon Musk and other controversial topics.
ELSEWHERE…
Efforts by some Democratic lawmakers to impeach Trump are going nowhere, the chair of the House Democratic Caucus said Tuesday.
"Impeachment is, at times, a tool that can be used. This president is no stranger to that; he's been impeached twice," Rep. Pete Aguilar (D-Calif.) told reporters. "But we don't have any confidence that House and Senate Republicans would do their jobs. And so this is not an exercise that we're willing to undertake."
Rep. Shri Thanedar (D-Mich.) filed seven articles of impeachment against Trump on Monday, including for the deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia to El Salvador and for blocking federal funds approved by Congress.
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