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Shortly after the Senate voted to approve its version of a large bill supported by Trump, Rep. Andy Ogles, a Republican, of Tennessee, proposed an amendment to return the bill to the original version of the house that was passed in late May.
Ogles made a series of criticisms about the Senate version of the bill after it passed Tuesday afternoon, including complaints that forced his voters to pay for health care for illegal foreigners without doing enough to prevent taxpayers from subsidizing green energy projects. Ogles also appears to be questioning the Senate’s changes to state and local tax (salt) deductions, which has left the Senate “significantly increasing the state and local taxes that Tennessees are forced to subsidize state and local taxes for the wealthy people in the blue state.”
The Senate succumbed to being an unelected staff member Democrats And rushed to an unfinished bill so they could go home on July 4. “The bill was passed and said on X.
“I don’t work in the Senate. I work for the people. That’s why I just brought an amendment to remove their fools and replace it with a powerful House bill we passed a few weeks ago. The Senate’s Big Bill’s Big Bill’s Trump Religion Trump’s purpose – all people follow the request of an unelected member.”
In the warring Republican faction
Rep. Andy Ogles (R-Tenn). (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc, via Getty Images)
Ogles and other Republicans passed the threshold on Tuesday whether Senate members’ rulings on Republican spending are necessary guidelines to obtain a simple majority of settlements. One of these decisions includes a requirement to exclude illegal immigrants from Medicaid eligibility to obtain a super majority rather than a simple majority to settle.
“We have a majority in the Senate and we should do it like that.” Rep. Chip Roy of R-Texas posted on Tuesday X. “The truth is that there are multiple senators who are happy to have senators as foil for maintaining the status quo. It’s not the leader, it’s the service of the swamp.”
The Senate began the House version of the A Large Bill Amendment on Monday, with many amendments being proposed by lawmakers. After the Senate ends the amendment, it voted to return the bill to Room approve.
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Large bill text was brought to the floor and the Senate clerk read on Saturday. The bill text is about 940 pages. (Dan Scully/Fox News)
Ogles’ office did not answer questions about whether his amendment would restore the Senate version to the original home version, which also means he does not intend to vote for the current Senate version.
Rep. Ralph Norman Said he doesn’t want to vote for the Senate version, but rather opposes pushing it forward. Roy warned that the odds of passing a spending package before the July 4 deadline after the Senate changes the home version, the chances of passing the package before the July 4 deadline are “a lot lower than hell 48 hours ago.”
Roy and Norman are both on the strong House Rules Committee, which must approve the Senate version in order to advance. R-Md’s Rep. Andy Harris told Fox News Tuesday that he did not think the Rules Committee vote would be passed immediately.
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R-Texas Rep. Chip Roy walked along the house steps of the building on May 18, 2023. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc, via Getty Images)
“The spokesperson will then have to decide how to restore it to the house frame,” Harris said. “Whether this is by scaling some Tax cuts There is an addition in the Senate, whether it’s about chasing some green new scams that the president doesn’t like – we’ll get there eventually, but I don’t think that will be in the next few days. ”
Harris clarified that he is also a motion to be carried out in the current state of the Senate.
Fox News’s Elizabeth Elkind and Alex Miller contributed to the report.

Senior News Analyst & National Affairs Writer
Prabhat Sharma is a veteran journalist with over 12 years of experience covering national news, current affairs, and breaking stories across India. Known for his analytical approach and in-depth reporting, Prabhat brings clarity to complex topics and delivers content that informs, educates, and empowers readers.
He is passionate about political transparency, policy analysis, and the evolving landscape of Indian journalism.
When he’s not writing, you’ll find him reading non-fiction, watching documentaries, or exploring offbeat destinations