Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent burdened Friday that “perfect cannot be the enemy of the good” whereas trying to move President Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” crammed together with his legislative priorities.
“The proper can’t be the enemy of the nice, and it is legislative sausage making, which is new for me,” Scott stated on the Religion & Freedom Coalition’s Street to Majority occasion in Washington, D.C.
He stated Republicans hailing from the Democratic states have been “going to get something” and that “the Senate’s going to get something,” including that “getting this passed is the single most important economic thing we’re going to do this year.”
Bessent is scheduled to attend the Senate Republican luncheon afterward Friday, two sources confirmed to The Hill, and Bessent met with blue-state Republicans over the state-and-local tax (SALT) deduction cap included within the invoice final night time.
Republicans have been dealt a significant blow on Thursday when Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough stated that certainly one of Republicans’ Medicaid provisions on supplier state taxes violated the Byrd Rule. That tax provision was imagined to be a significant income for the laws.
One other thorn in Republicans’ efforts to move the laws has been blue-state Home Republicans, who’ve urged for a better SALT deduction cap. The Home invoice included a $40,000 SALT cap although the Senate’s model initially included a $10,000 deduction cap.
Sources aware of negotiations round SALT informed The Hill the White Home and SALT Republicans are closing in on a deal however will want buy-in first from Senate Republicans.
Regardless of the swirling uncertainty over the laws, Bessent projected confidence on the Religion & Freedom Coalition occasion, “we’re going to get the one big, beautiful bill to the president’s desk and signed on July 4.”