Senate Republicans say they’re going to rewrite the 1,116-page invoice the Home narrowly handed Thursday to enact President Trump’s agenda.

Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) urged GOP senators at a gathering Tuesday to maintain their modifications to the invoice as minimal as potential to keep away from wrecking the fragile compromises he cobbled collectively within the Home to muster 215 votes for the laws.

Senate Majority Chief John Thune (R-S.D.), nevertheless, informed reporters that the Senate could have its “imprint” on the invoice, and his GOP colleagues wish to make modifications to an array of provisions.

Listed below are a few of the modifications they’re eyeing.

Deficit discount

Senate conservatives led by Sens. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), Rick Scott (R-Fla.) and Mike Lee (R-Utah) need to embody greater spending cuts within the invoice, arguing to colleagues that the laws, as drafted within the Home, will do little to rein in spending.

Johnson isn’t laying out particular cuts however calling for a return to pre-pandemic ranges of federal spending adjusted for inflation and inhabitants development.

“My primary focus now is spending. This is completely unacceptable. Current projections are $2.2 trillion per year deficit,” he mentioned. “There should be a goal of this Republican Senate to reduce the deficit, not increase it. We’re increasing it.”

Whereas Home Republicans backed away from making modifications to the Federal Medical Help Proportion (FMAP) for Medicaid, Johnson and different Senate funds hawks need to handle it.

Scott, an in depth ally of Trump, is asking for an entire repeal of the renewable power incentives created beneath President Biden within the Inflation Discount Act.

“We should completely eliminate the Green New Deal,” he mentioned.

Lee is taking a look at federal advantages going to unlawful immigrants, which he mentioned haven’t been utterly zeroed out within the Home invoice.

Medicaid

Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), Susan Collins (R-Maine), Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) are threatening to oppose Medicaid reforms that will minimize advantages and they’re taking an in depth have a look at limits within the invoice on states’ capacity to make use of well being care supplier taxes to gather extra federal Medicaid funding.

Their chief concern is that reductions in federal Medicaid funding to states would put stress on rural hospitals and will pressure a few of them to shut.

“We’re still trying to figure out what the provider tax reforms are but I’m very worried about our rural hospitals in Maine,” Collins informed The Hill Wednesday.

One other space of concern is language within the Home invoice requiring folks incomes between 100% and 138 % of the federal poverty stage to pay as much as $35 per medical service.

Hawley says that will imply “beneficiaries pay more.”

“These are working people in particular who are going to have to pay more,” he mentioned.

However different Republicans need to increase the Medicaid reforms to additional scale back this system’s prices over the subsequent decade.

Some senators need to additional prohibit the provision to Medicaid protection to able-bodied adults.

“Medicaid ought to go back and do what it was set up to do. It was set up to take care of poor children and the chronically ill, and that’s what the focus should be,” Scott mentioned, noting that Florida didn’t increase Medicaid protection beneath the Inexpensive Care Act.

Inexperienced power incentives

Senate Republicans could need to loosen the powerful stance the Home invoice takes on climate-friendly tax credit.

In 2022, the Democrats’ Inflation Discount Act included billions of {dollars} in tax credit that supercharged funding in low-carbon power applied sciences together with wind and photo voltaic.

The Home model of the invoice put powerful new restrictions on a few of these credit – particularly now for a lot of kinds of power they solely apply to tasks that  break floor inside 60 days of the invoice’s enactment. 

Previous to the textual content’s launch, Sens. John Curtis (R-Utah), Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), Murkowski and Moran issued a letter calling for a “targeted, pragmatic approach” and warning in opposition to a “full-scale” repeal.

Tillis informed The Hill this previous week that modifications would should be made to assist corporations which have already invested within the credit.

“If millions or billions of dollars have been deployed, we’ve got to give those businesses some offramp,” he mentioned.

In the meantime, Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) additionally known as for some modifications final week, notably to assist rising know-how like geothermal power.

State and Native Tax (SALT) deductions

Speaker Johnson and Home Republicans hailing from high-tax blue states held intense talks in current weeks to nail down a deal on the state and native tax (SALT) deduction cap that helped the chamber clear the invoice earlier than Memorial Day.

A lot to their chagrin, it’s potential that might all be for nought. 

Senate Republicans are broadly anticipated to throw their weight round over methods to deal with the SALT deduction cap, which Johnson and SALT members set at $40,000 for these making $500,000 or much less — up from the $10,000 cap that was set by the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. 

Complicating issues for SALT members within the Home is there isn’t a comparable dynamic throughout the Capitol. There isn’t a single Senate Republican from any high-tax blue state, leaving many members wanting to cut down what they view as a beneficiant $40,000 determine to one thing extra manageable, of their view. 

“It’s not a Senate issue,” Thune informed The Hill. 

“I know the House had to make a deal, but our members want to be heard on it and I assume we’ll have something to say,” he added.  

The cap is ready to run out on the finish of the 12 months, giving the half-dozen SALT members leverage as they maintain the keys to last passage as long as they vote as a bloc. 

However Senate Republicans have made it identified they anticipate to have their voices heard on the topic, although they’re cognizant of Johnson’s plight. 

“The number we care most about is 218,” mentioned Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), a former Home member. “Obviously, we’d be open to the Speaker’s desires, just like he’s been open to ours.”

Sunsets

A high precedence of Thune and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) will probably be to make a number of high-profile enterprise tax breaks everlasting — or at the very least prolong them over the subsequent decade.

The Home invoice restores 100-percent bonus depreciation for short-term investments from 2025 to 2029.

Equally, it restores rapid expensing for home analysis and growth and the EBITDA-based restrict on enterprise curiosity deductions from 2025 to 2029.

Thune on Thursday flagged that as a difficulty that Senate Republicans need to change.

He mentioned GOP senators are reviewing “the question of permanence,” noting the Home invoice has “shorter-term windows” on the company tax provisions.

Crapo mentioned the enterprise bonus-depreciation and expensing provisions “need to be permanent.”

Spectrum public sale

The Home Republican invoice would plan for the sale of 600 MHz of government-owned spectrum to assist offset the price of tax breaks, one thing that has drawn robust opposition from Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, and different protection hawks.

“It has to be taken out or modified,” Rounds mentioned of that Home language on spectrum. “That to me is of critical national importance.”

He defined that Home negotiators “extended the [spectrum] auction authority until 2034” however solely protected the army parts of the spectrum within the first public sale sale.

“If they’re going to have auction authority until 2034, the [Department of Defense] portions and the [intelligence community] portions have got to be protected during the time this auction authority exists,” Rounds mentioned.