Trump, House Republicans and GOP
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Two Republicans from central and Eastern Washington voted on Thursday to pass President Donald Trump's signature bill to cut taxes and boost spending on immigration enforcement, after their fellow GOP lawmakers who represent the same areas in Olympia warned against the legislation's cuts to Medicaid.
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Explícame on MSNRepublicans in Washington criticize tax plan, point out that it is the largest increase in historyWashington residents face a significant tax increase following Governor Bob Ferguson's signing of a $78 billion budget. This move, aimed at addressing a $16 billion deficit, has sparked criticism from Republicans who label it the largest tax hike in state history.
The clip is the first wave of attack ads since Perez, D-Skamania, fell into hot water with Democrats over her alignment with Republicans on some controversial votes regarding immigration and voter eligibility.
More than three years after it was approved by Congress, a plaque honoring members of law enforcement for defending the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, is instead sitting in a Capitol basement utility room.
An anti-tax millionaire behind last year's statewide ballot measures in Washington is preparing to run more voter initiatives this year.
Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.) was wide awake during Wednesday's 1 a.m. hearing to scold Republican supporters of the president's exorbitant tax-cut package.
Thursday morning's vote is already at the center of ads in swing districts, as Democrats and Republicans battle for control of the House in the midterm elections.
President Donald Trump’s signature budget legislation would punish 14 states that offer health coverage to people in the U.S. without authorization.
Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) on Thursday criticized the House GOP’s recent sprawling package to enact President Trump’s tax priorities and cut spending, while swiping at his colleagues in the lower chamber for setting “the bar way too low” in their goal to generate savings. “They just kept talking about $1.5 trillion. They set the bar…
About 200,000 Washingtonians could lose health care coverage if the U.S. Senate approves the cuts, and hospitals, clinics and nursing homes would lose key funding.
The House GOP campaign arm is targeting Democrats holding politically risky seats for opposing the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act."