Trump increases criticism of Republican senators who could stop their financing bill

President Donald Trump is increasing his criticisms to Republican senators who threaten to complicate the approval of the “Law of a Big Law”, which advances his legislative agenda.
On Tuesday, he criticized Senator Rand Paul in a position on social networks after Kentucky republican publicly criticized Megabill with the house.
Paul opposes the bill due to an increase in debt roof that said “would explode the deficits.” Paul said in an event in Iowa last week that the cuts in the bill are “weak and anemic” and asked for cuts to other rights, that Trump has made it clear that they are a red line for him.

President Donald Trump talks to journalists in the rain after arriving at Air Force One at the Andrews Joint Base, Maryland, May 30, 2025. Senator Rand Paul makes a television interview in the Office Building of the Senate of Russell, June 3, 2025.
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“Rand Paul has very little BBB understanding, especially the tremendous growth that is coming. In a publication in its conservative social media platform on Tuesday morning.
In Separate publicationTrump said Paul “never has any practical or constructive idea.” During the weekend, Trump said That if Pablo votes against the bill, “Kentucky’s great people will never forgive him!”
Trump is working on telephones and has meetings with senators to try to approve his schedule of sweeping by Congress.
Trump met with the leader of the majority of the Senate John Thune in the White House yesterday, according to a White House official. The meeting occurs when Thune faces the Herculean task of transferring this bill backed by the Chamber through the Senate in the most expeditious way possible.
Until now, Thune has not made clear what his strategy will be to move this package through the upper chamber. But as things are currently, Thune can only afford to lose three of its members of the Republican party to pass the package, and at this time it has more members than that express serious doubts about the bill.
The dissemination of the president has so far addressed several senators who have publicly expressed the need to see substantive changes in the bill backed by the Chamber.
Trump met with Republican Senator Rick Scott on Monday to discuss the bill, the sources confirmed to ABC News. Scott is among a group of intransigent of the Senate who want to see larger cuts for government spending on this bill.
Republican senator Ron Johnson, who also received a Trump call on Monday, according to the White House, has also expressed concern about his concerns that the bill is not going far enough to reduce federal expenditure.
But anyone who wishes to change the bill will have to balance the desire for the expenses of expenses of the uncompromising against the calls of others at the conference that insist that there are no cuts to Medicaid. Changes in Medicaid are one of the key ways in which the house bill reduces spending levels.
Trump seems to be pointing to this part of the Republican Conference too, speaking with Republican Senator Josh Hawley on the phone, confirmed a White House official. Hawley, who has said that he opposes possible cuts to the benefits of Medicaid, said in a Publish in x After that call, that Trump “said again, there are no medical benefits cuts.”

The leader of the majority of the Senate, John Thune, answers questions from the journalists at the Washington Capitol, on June 2, 2025.
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Trump pressed the Republican senators to align in a position in their social media site Monday nightEmphasizing that the Megabill of the Republican Tax wants on his desk before the holidays of July 4.
“I call all my republican friends in the Senate and the camera that work as quickly as they can to take this bill to my desk before July 4,” Trump wrote.

Senator Josh Hawley talks to the press after voting about Michael Duffey’s nomination to be under Secretary of Defense for acquisition and support, on June 2, 2025 in Washington.
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Echoing the feelings of Trump, the White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, suggested on Monday that the Republican senators who vote against Trump’s Megabill will have a price to pay.
“His voters will know. That is unacceptable for Republican voters and all voters throughout the country who chose this president in a republican majority to do things in Capitol Hill,” Leavitt said.
Despite expressing some disgust on the big tax bill last week, Leavitt said Trump was interested in maintaining the bill largely in touch.
“These discussions are ongoing, but the president will not support those key priorities that promised the American public, and they expect Capitol Hill to help him deliver,” Leavitt said.