Amid talks of cuts, lawmakers suggested likely defense spending increases and didnât rule out changes to COVID-era rules for Medicaid.
DORAL, Fla.âAs a House Republican retreat in Florida drew to a close on Jan. 29, many lawmakers suggested they had made progress on a reconciliation budget bill designed to avoid any filibuster attempt by Democrats in the Senate and further President Donald J. Trumpâs agenda.
But the more fine-grained blueprint Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) hoped for ahead of the gathering at Trump National Doral Miami had not yet materialized.
In an interview with The Epoch Times, Rep. Keith Self (R-Texas) characterized the results so far as âa processâ rather than a blueprint.
âUntil we get past the fear of the CBO [Congressional Budget Office] and the Senate Parliamentarian, itâs going to be a process,â he said.
Under the Byrd rule, the parliamentarian can strike various provisions from any reconciliation bill, including those not deemed to impact spending or revenues directly. The CBO, meanwhile, would furnish estimates of any reconciliation legislationâs cost.
Rep. Morgan Griffith (R-Va.) said the work-in-progress was more than a process. He told The Epoch Times that he and his colleagues had reached the stage of a âdraft blueprint.â
Rep. Jack Bergman (R-Mich.) told The Epoch Times that lawmakers âhave a hard timeâwe all doâgetting past specific numbers.â
âTheyâre getting close to a blueprint,â Bergman said.
Rep. Nathan Moran (R-Texas) also stressed the complexity of drawing up the reconciliation budget.
âWeâre going to continue to iron out things until the very last minute,â he told The Epoch Times.
While Republicans have generally talked of cuts and efficiencies, not all of the reconciliation budget will likely be characterized by austerity.
House Republican Conference Chair Lisa McClain (R-Mich.) told The Epoch Times that House Armed Services Committee Chair Mike Rogers (R-Ala.) and other lawmakers spoke of a need for additional defense spending.
âEverythingâs on the table right now,â McClain said.
Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.), a member of the House Armed Services Committeeâs Europe subcommittee, suggested Ukraine aid would continue, a sore subject for many other Republicans. He accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of being âfixated on recreating the failed Soviet Union.â
âSo any effort to try to work with him is going to fail,â Wilson told The Epoch Times.
On the other side of the ledger, Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), who chairs the House Appropriations Committee, told The Epoch Times that changes to Medicaid were âon the table.â
âWe put a lot of extra people on during COVID,â he said.
Earlier in the day, Johnson told reporters that benefits reductions were not coming for Medicaid, Social Security, or Medicare.
âWhat weâre talking about is efficiencies in the programs to make them work better for the people who receive those benefits,â he said, adding that waste, fraud, and abuse of those programs were in focus.
As his colleagues trickled out of Doral, Rep. Ben Cline (R-Va.) struck an optimistic tone on the groupâs collective effort, which comes after a suite of far-reaching Trump executive actions have driven a demand for quick action from the presidentâs base, along with pushback from Democrats and the judiciary.
âWe know that reconciliation is a challenging process, but we know we can achieve it in a way that is fiscally responsible,â Cline told The Epoch Times.
Rep. Celeste Maloy (R-Utah) told The Epoch Times that her fellow Republicans were âstill talkingâbut thatâs kind of the point, right?â
âOn our side of the aisle where we disagree, weâre okay with disagreeing. But then at some point, weâre going to have the vote, and I think everyone wants to deliver a win,â she said.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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