[Congressional Record Volume 171, Number 107 (Monday, June 23, 2025)]
[Senate]
[Page S3485]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ONE BIG BEAUTIFUL BILL
Mr. SCHUMER. Madam President, on reconciliation, we have arrived at a
pivotal week in the U.S. Senate, a week where Senate Republicans have
to make a choice: either stand up for your constituents, stand up to
defend Medicaid, stand up to protect millions of good-paying jobs or
stand with Donald Trump and his billionaire friends. That is the
fundamental choice Republicans face with their so-called Big Beautiful
Bill.
Before the week is out, we expect Republicans will bring their bill
to the floor for debate. That means, very soon, the Senate is going to
have a long night of vote-arama. When vote-arama begins, Democrats will
be ready. We will pick the Republicans' bill apart. We will put
Republicans on record. We will force Republicans to explain in multiple
ways, again and again and again, why they want to cut taxes for the
rich at the expense of working people.
Even now, many Senate Republicans know their own bill is poison. One
reason is that their bill will decimate rural hospitals even more than
the House bill would, as bad as that was. It will do that by curtailing
the provider tax that many States use to fund Medicaid. Now, they know
it is terrible so it sounds like Senate Republicans are trying to
sweeten this bitter deal by adding a rural hospital fund in the hopes
of easing the worries of some Members among their rank.
But make no mistake about it--and the rural hospitals and the
American Hospital Association know it--this won't work. Whatever
funding Republicans would offer in a rural hospital fund would easily
be overwhelmed by cuts the States would still face and by the
difficulty rural hospitals would still be in. A rural hospital fund
would be like putting a bandaid over an amputation. Again, it is not
going to work.
Even before we get to vote-arama, Democrats have already successfully
pushed back against some of the nastiest provisions in the Republicans'
bill. This work is certainly not done--it will continue to be an
ongoing process--but Democrats will continue to use every tool
available in the Senate to fight back against the Republicans' bill.
Today, I want to mention one important example.
Yesterday, I announced that Senate Democrats successfully challenged
a provision Republicans tried to sneak into their bill that would have
stripped Federal judges of their ability to enforce their own rulings.
Now, we all know Federal judges have ruled against the Trump
administration in the vast majority of cases that are currently in
court. Many of the administration's most harmful Executive orders have
been temporarily halted through preliminary injunctions, restraining
orders, and other emergency rulings by the courts.
So what did Senate Republicans try to do?
They tried to write a workaround into their reconciliation bill by
preventing judges from being able to even issue preliminary injunctions
or restraining orders unless plaintiffs pay for the bond upfront. It
goes even further than what the House Republicans tried to do. That
meant, if someone wanted courts to put a stop to Donald Trump's
freezing of Federal funds or to stop DOGE from rummaging through
people's private data or any number of abuses--there are so many--they
first had to pay up before the courts could even issue a court
order. That is not justice, my Republican friends. That is pay-to-play.
It is antithetical to our system of checks and balances. Once again,
the wealthy are favored. They will be able to afford these bonds, but
middle-class people, poor people, many groups will not.
I am pleased--very pleased--that we Democrats have successfully
pushed back against this lawless provision. Now, to be sure, not every
decision has gone our way. But we will keep fighting until the last
possible moment to strip the worst parts of the ``Big Ugly Bill'' that
have flown under the radar.
None of this has been easy to do. I want to thank all the ranking
members and their staffs involved in this long, technical process. My
staff has done a great job--I salute them--so has Senator Merkley's
staff. He is our ranking member on the Budget Committee. The hours have
been long. The issues they have worked through have been immensely
complicated so I thank them for their continued good work.
Let me close by looking forward for a moment. The debate that will
take place here on the floor in the coming days will be one of the most
consequential the Senate has seen in years.
At stake is the healthcare of tens of millions of Americans. At stake
is over 2 million jobs in red States and blue States alike, which could
throw our country into a recession--there are so many job cuts--all for
tax cuts for the wealthy.
But today, I want to leave my Republican colleagues with this: If
they proceed with their ``Big Ugly Bill,'' they will push our Nation's
debt to a point of no return. If Senate Republicans try to make Donald
Trump's tax cuts permanent, as they are trying to do, they will add
tens of trillions to the national debt in the coming decade--not a few
trillion, tens of trillions in the coming decades.
Senate Republicans know this. So what do they do? They try to use a
budgetary gimmick called current policy baseline to pretend as if these
Trump taxes won't cost anything. This has never been done before in
this way, but they are sort of desperate.
Look, Republicans can use whatever budgetary gimmicks they want to
try to make the math work on paper, but you can't paper over the real-
life economic consequences of adding tens of trillions to the debt.
They are adding the money to the debt, that is for sure. They just try
to do a paper trick so that it doesn't look like it, but it does, and
interest rates will go sky-high, no matter what parliamentary gimmick
they try to use.
There will be higher borrowing costs for all Americans for cars, for
homes, and for credit cards. Americans are going to feel these higher
costs because interest rates will go up because they are making the
debt so deep. Americans are going to feel this everywhere they look.
American household wealth will permanently be hobbled. Our economy will
fail to reach its full potential. That is what will happen if
Republicans proceed. Again, there aren't enough budgetary gimmicks in
the world to change that fact.
And for what? For what? Why are Republicans doing all of this? So
billionaires can pay less in taxes while tens of millions lose their
healthcare benefits and pay more for everyday expenses.
I urge the Republicans not to move forward. It is abundantly clear
the bill is deeply flawed. If they do, Senate Democrats will continue
to expose the Republicans' bill for the debt-busting mess that it truly
is.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from South Carolina.
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