Trump, House
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Impacts
By Alan Jaffe Multiple independent analyses say the recently passed House reconciliation bill — even with its deep spending cuts in some areas — would add trillions of dollars to the federal deficit over 10 years.
2h
The Western Journal on MSNWife of Top Trump Aide Stephen Miller Abandons White House to Follow Elon MuskSpokeswoman Katie Miller is leaving the Department of Government Efficiency to work with Elon Musk after the billionaire's exit from the Trump administration on Wednesday. Miller, the spouse of White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller,
3d
MiBolsilloColombia on MSNWhite House: No vote on Trump's budget bill could mean recession and higher taxesThe White House warns that without Senate approval of the 'One, Big, Beautiful Bill,' the U.S. risks recession and a $4 trillion tax hike.
Investigators say the software enables price fixing, which the Biden White House said costs Denver tenants $1,600 in additional rent each year.
House Republicans are working on President Trump's budget reconciliation bill this week, and the White House wants a vote soon.
3d
MiBolsilloColombia on MSNMusk criticizes Trump's spending bill as White House readies $9.4B DOGE cutsElon Musk voices disapproval over Trump's recent spending bill, as the White House prepares to send a $9.4 billion DOGE cuts package to Congress. The proposed cuts target public broadcasting and foreign aid,
"Put simply, The Big Beautiful Bill will empower Big Beautiful Deportations," the White House said May 17 in a press release after the bill stalled.
The White House is making the case this week that passing President Trump’s "big beautiful bill" would be the fiscally responsible move as a flurry of analyses find otherwise and objections from some Republican fiscal conservatives continued to jeopardize progress.
Musk thanked Trump for this time in Washington and said DOGE isn't going anywhere, but will only get stronger.
House Republican leadership is pressing ahead toward a vote on landmark legislation that would codify President Trump’s agenda this week, the first major push to pass his “big, beautiful bill” since he resumed office.
White House officials maintain bankers’ concerns are overstated and discount expected revenues from the president’s tariffs.