Elon Musk lashes out at Senate’s take on Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill as support comes down to the wire

Elon Musk has slammed the Senate version of President Donald Trump’s “Big, Beautiful Bill” as support for the motion to proceed with the legislation in the upper chamber comes down to the wire.
“The latest Senate draft bill will destroy millions of jobs in America and cause immense strategic harm to our country!” Musk wrote on X on Saturday afternoon. “Utterly insane and destructive. It gives handouts to industries of the past while severely damaging industries of the future.”
Republicans are attempting to garner sufficient support on Saturday to pass a motion to proceed with the legislation. Senate Republicans dropped the final text of the sprawling 940-page bill late on Friday evening.
Trump has said he wants the Senate to pass the legislation, which would include sweeping spending cuts to pay for the tax cuts he signed into law in 2017, as well as increased spending for the military, oil exploration, and immigration enforcement, before the July 4th weekend.
Democratic Senate Leader Chuck Schumer of New York wrote on X on Saturday afternoon that he would “object to Republicans moving forward on their Big, Ugly Bill without reading it on the Senate floor. Republicans won’t tell America what’s in the bill. So Democrats are forcing it to be read start to finish on the floor. We will be here all night if that’s what it takes to read it.”

Reading the nearly 1,000-page bill on the floor is estimated to take 15 hours.
Republicans, who have 53 seats in the Senate, plan to pass the bill using the process of budget reconciliation. That would allow them to sidestep a filibuster from the Democrats as long as the legislation relates to the budget. For the past week, the Senate parliamentarian’s office has issued advisories about which parts do not comply with the rules of reconciliation.
The biggest sticking point was major changes to Medicaid. Specifically, the legislation would require that Medicaid recipients who are able-bodied and without dependent children would have to work or participate in community service or education for 80 hours a month. In addition, the legislation limits the amount of money states can tax health care providers like hospitals and nursing homes to raise money for Medicaid.
But the American Hospital Association said this would devastate rural hospitals that rely on Medicaid dollars. The parliamentarian removed the provider tax provision, but the new version of the bill simply delays when the cap goes into effect.
Before the text dropped, Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, who hails from a state with a large number of rural hospitals and that expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act in 2023, said he was a “no” on the motion to proceed because of Medicaid.
“It will cause a lot of people to have to be moved off of Medicaid,” he told The Independent on Friday evening. “Is just inescapable. The price tag’s too high, and the transition protocol, even if you agree with the ultimate target.”
In addition, the legislation also rolls back some of the renewable energy tax credits implemented in the Inflation Reduction Act, the legislation former President Joe Biden signed that used the same budget reconciliation process.
If the bill passes the Senate, it will return to the House of Representatives, which passed it last month. But plenty of conservatives have made objections to the Senate’s changes.
Trump lobbied senators on Saturday while playing golf with Senators Rand Paul of Kentucky and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina.
Tillis, who’s up for re-election in 2028, outlined his opposition to the bill again on Saturday, saying in a statement that “It would result in tens of billions of dollars in lost funding for North Carolina, including our hospitals and rural communities. This will force the state to make painful decisions like eliminating Medicaid coverage for hundreds of thousands in the expansion population, and even reducing critical services for those in the traditional Medicaid population.”
Senator Tim Sheehy of Montana wrote on X ahead of the vote on Saturday, “I have just concluded productive discussions with leadership. I will be leading an amendment to strip the sale of public lands from this bill. I will vote yes on the motion to proceed. We must quickly pass the Big Beautiful Bill to advance President Trump’s agenda.”
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