Sunday, September 21, 2025

Senate holds vote marathon on amendments to Trump’s one big beautiful bill – US politics live

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The day so far

  • Vote-a-rama is under way in the Senate on Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” that would enact his domestic tax and spending agenda – and add an estimated $3.3tn to the national debt over the next decade. The final vote on passage could come as late as the early hours of tomorrow morning. Trump has been meeting with Senate majority leader John Thune and House speaker Mike Johnson in an effort to pressure Republicans to back the bill and meet Trump’s imposed 4 July deadline. But it’ll be tight for the GOP. They can only afford to lose three votes for the legislation to pass and two senators have already expressed they’re firm no’s – Rand Paul and Thom Tillis, who today said he won’t be seeking re-election – while several key moderate holdouts have kept their cards close to their chests today.

  • Trump is due to sign an executive order terminating US sanctions on Syria, following through on his decision in May to unwind the measures to help Syria rebuild after 14 devastating years of civil war. Some sanctions on former Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad and other individuals will remain in place including those on Assad’s associates, human rights abusers, drug traffickers, people linked to chemical weapons activities, the Islamic State and ISIS affiliates and proxies for Iran.

  • Canadian prime minister Mark Carney said late last night that trade talks with the US had resumed after Canada rescinded its plan to tax US technology firms. Today, White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett confirmed that the United States would restart trade negotiations with Canada immediately. Trump had abruptly called off trade talks on Friday amid a dispute over the levy and threatened new tariffs on Canadian goods over the tax, which would’ve come into effect today.

  • The Trump administration sued the city of Los Angeles over policies limiting city cooperation with federal immigration authorities, continuing a confrontation over Donald Trump’s aggressive deportation efforts in the largely Democratic city. The lawsuit, filed by the justice department, alleges that policies barring city resources from aiding in immigration enforcement operations or collecting information about individuals’ citizenship status violate federal law.

  • The Trump administration informed Harvard University that its investigation found that the university violated federal civil rights law over its treatment of Jewish and Israeli students, putting its federal funding further at risk.

  • Trump will host Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on 7 July, Axios is reporting, citing an Israeli official. Israel’s strategic affairs minister Ron Dermer will also meet with officials at the White House this week for talks on Iran and a new push for a ceasefire in Gaza. Israel’s ongoing and relentless bombardment on Gaza killed at least another 38 civilians today.

  • Trump wrote to Fed chair Jerome Powell again urging him to lower interest rates. Attacking Powell and members of the Fed board of governors, who he accused of failing to do their jobs, the president said today that he believes interest rates should be lowered to about 1%. Powell and the Fed have stated many times that they take independent economic decisions.

  • Trump will travel tomorrow to the opening of the new – and highly controversial – immigrant detention facility in the Florida Everglades, dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz”.

  • EU trade commissioner Maroš Šefčovič has said he will fly to Washington tomorrow for trade talks. “We are absolutely focusing on … a positive outcome,” he told reporters.

  • Trump has suggested there won’t be a trade deal with Japan, saying that Japan would be the recipient of a letter related to trade, following pledges by his administration to send letters to countries outlining tariffs they would need to pay to the UA.

  • The Trump administration appealed a federal judge’s decision to strike down an executive order targeting law firm Perkins Coie over its past legal work for Hillary Clinton and others.

  • The US has revoked visas for members of Britain’s Bob Vylan punk-rap duo after they led anti-IDF chants during their set at the Glastonbury music festival over the weekend that the state department and the BBC, which broadcast the event, said were antisemitic. The state department did not immediately give more details as to the names of those who had visas revoked and what kind of visas they were. Bob Vylan is scheduled to play some concerts in the US in November.

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Key events

Summary

Today So Far

Thirteen hours since voting began, the Senate still has not passed Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill,” which would enact his domestic tax and spending agenda – and add an estimated $3.3tn to the national debt over the next decade. The vote is expected to be tight – Republicans can only afford to lose three votes for the legislation to pass and two senators have already expressed they’re firm no’s – Rand Paul and Thom Tillis.

As we await news on that front, here are the top headlines we’ve followed so far today:

  • In a series of posts on social media, tech billionaire Elon Musk, who spent more than a quarter of a billion dollars in support of Trump’s candidacy, denounced Republican efforts to pass the president’s budget bill. Later, Musk pledged to found a new political party he called the “America Party” and support candidates who did not back the budget bill in future elections.

  • The Senate parliamentarian found that Republicans can include a provision that would block Medicaid funding from Planned Parenthood in the “big, beautiful bill”.

  • Trump signed an executive order overturning sanctions on Syria today and issued a memorandum on US policy toward Cuba. The president’s executive order revokes sanctions on Syria while maintaining sanction’s on the country’s former president Bashar al-Assad. In a separate memo, Trump directed the federal government to enforce a statutory ban on US tourism to Cuba and continue an economic embargo on the island nation.

  • On the US Agency for International Development’s last day, former presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush delivered remarks praising staffers and The Lancet medical journal published research finding the agency had prevented more than 91 million deaths globally, including 30 million deaths among children. The Lancet added that the dismantling of USAID could result in 14 million additional deaths by 2030.

  • A federal judge has ruled that Kilmar Ábrego García must remain in jail, citing fears that the Trump administration may deport him ahead of his trial if he is released. Earlier this week, the same judge ordered Ábrego García released ahead of his trial on smuggling charges. Ábrego García’s attorneys have characterized the charges as an attempt to justify the Trump administration’s mistaken deportation of Ábrego García earlier this year.

  • Trump has dropped his lawsuit against pollster J Ann Selzer and the Des Moines Register, according to a court filing today. Trump sued Selzer and the newspaper after it published a poll finding that Kamala Harris would win Iowa in the presidential election by three percentage points.

  • Congressmembers must give the Department of Homeland Security a week’s notice before visiting immigration detention facilities, according to new department guidance. Visits on shorter notice must be approved directly by department secretary Kristi Noem. Federal law allows lawmakers and their staff to visit immigration detention facilities unnanounced to oversee the conditions inside such facilities. Meanwhile, Trump will travel tomorrow to the opening of the new – and highly controversial – immigrant detention facility in the Florida Everglades, dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz”.

  • The Trump administration sued the city of Los Angeles over policies limiting city cooperation with federal immigration authorities, continuing a confrontation over Donald Trump’s aggressive deportation efforts in the largely Democratic city. The lawsuit, filed by the justice department, alleges that policies barring city resources from aiding in immigration enforcement operations or collecting information about individuals’ citizenship status violate federal law.

  • The Trump administration informed Harvard University that its investigation found that the university violated federal civil rights law over its treatment of Jewish and Israeli students, putting its federal funding further at risk.

  • Trump will host Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on 7 July. Israel’s strategic affairs minister Ron Dermer will also meet with officials at the White House this week for talks on Iran and a new push for a ceasefire in Gaza. Israel’s ongoing and relentless bombardment on Gaza killed at least another 38 civilians today.

  • Trump wrote to Fed chair Jerome Powell again urging him to lower interest rates. Attacking Powell and members of the Fed board of governors, who he accused of failing to do their jobs, the president said today that he believes interest rates should be lowered to about 1%.

  • Trump has suggested there won’t be a trade deal with Japan, saying that Japan would be the recipient of a letter related to trade, following pledges by his administration to send letters to countries outlining tariffs they would need to pay to the UA.

  • The Trump administration appealed a federal judge’s decision to strike down an executive order targeting law firm Perkins Coie over its past legal work for Hillary Clinton and others.

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