The legislators of the Chamber’s Budget Committee voted to advance their law on expenses and fiscals known as the Big Beautiful Big Beautiful Law on a close margin during a weekend audience on May 18. The 1,116 pages package includes several key provisions affecting the construction industry.
Four Republicans: Reques. Ralph Norman (SC), Andre Clyde (Ga.), CHIP ROY (Texas) and Josh Brecheen (Okla.)-voted against the bill and blocked it on Friday, but responded to “present” on Sunday’s view, allowing the measure to advance by a 17-16 vote. Representative Lloyd Smucker (R-Pa.) Also voted against the bill on Friday, but voted for Sunday.
The Committee also voted according to party lines to block four amendments proposed by the Democrats.
The legislators are moving the legislation ahead of the president of the house Mike Johnson (r-la.) Deadline of the Day Memorial. Appearing on Fox News on Sunday before the committee’s vote, Johnson said he hopes to move the bill to the mid-week rules committee and to have it at the house plant at the end of the week to reach its term. The Committee on the Rules of the Chamber scheduled an audience on the bill on May 1, May 21.
“We are on the right track, working throughout the day to deliver this nation-shaped legislation for the American people as soon as possible,” said Johnson. “The 11 of our committees have wrapped their work and spent less and saved more than we initially projected.”
But some republican legislators, including the four who voted “present” on May 18, want to increase the addition of Medicaid work requirements that will come into force by 2029 and end the benefits of renewable energy tax. Casa Freedom Cauc criticized the portions of the bill, saying in a statement that it would increase short-term deficits and that promised savings are years or could never be materialized.
“The bill does not yet fulfill the moment,” Roy wrote in a post on social media.
Democrats have also criticized the legislation on the cuts of health care programs and eating benefits, as well as the deficit.
“I am worried about this bill because it is a transfer of incredibly enormous richness of working families to the richest North -Americans, the billionaire class,” said Katherine Clark (Mass.) Democrat (Mass.) As he appeared in Ana Cabrera’s reports in MSNBC.
Once in the House, the legislation will go to the Senate. There, Republicans will only need a simple majority, more than three -fifths, to pass the bill due to the reconciliation process.
Costs and tax cuts
The package also includes cuts to the programs that benefit the environment and the net energy projects that the congress previously established in the Act of Inflation Reduction of 2022. It would also extend and make permanent tax cuts in 2017 that benefit many contractors, but otherwise they are due to expire.
These cuts would affect the Gas Reduction Fund of the United States Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of the Energy Loan Program Office and the tribal energy loan guarantee program, among other programs. Some funding for transmission projects would also be reduced.
The bill will eliminate hundreds of thousands of energy jobs and “include other deeply disturbing provisions,” said Sean McGARVEY, President of North America’s construction unions (Nabtu) in a statement. He added that Nabtu hopes that the legislators will address the group’s concerns before the bill will reach the apartment of the house.
“One of our main priorities in this process has been to protect significant job opportunities, but this priority is being completely diminished,” said McGARVEY. “Work cuts for blue neck Americans should not make the bill for billionary tax cuts.”
The bill would create a “risk compensation program” within the Department of Energy to protect some owners of energy projects of the federal action that leads to “irrepressed losses” in sub-construction projects. Project owners should pay a registration fee equal to 5% of their planned capital costs plus 1.5% of the annual premiums to join and remain in the program, and change would be able to submit an application to the Secretary of Energy for their indemnification in the event of a federal action that revox the approval or otherwise delays a project or no longer viable. The program would be open to developers of fossil and nuclear fuel projects, but not for solar or wind projects.
The package would extend many of the provisions of the Tax cuts and jobs of 2017, including one of the 199A deductions for permanent passage companies. Most construction companies are ranked in the program. The deduction would also increase from 20% to 23%.
It would also eliminate taxes on the remuneration of overtime for most workers until 2028.
Generally, the non -partisan committee of a responsible federal budget estimates that the package would add $ 3.3 trillion to national debt for a decade and increase the deficit of 2027 by $ 600 million.