Threats to Senate’s July 4 Reconciliation rush

What is sitting before the Republicans to be solved before taking a Reconciliation Vote. Been rush and scramble to get this bill in order to please holdouts and pass before July 4th. Hopefully, some of these critters will start to have a heart. Hopefully they start to think about how their actions will hurt their constituents. Many of them did vote Republican.

Republicans have a lot working against them to meet that deadline.

First, Senate Republicans need to race through time-consuming reconciliation procedures that could throw a wrench into their plans. Behind the scenes, they’ll need to hash out all the complicated political challenges plaguing the bill. And they don’t have much room to lose votes in either chamber.

The Byrd Bath. The main procedural hurdle for Senate Republicans to clear is wrapping up the “Byrd Bath.” That’s when Democratic and GOP aides each argue their case to the Senate parliamentarian about whether provisions in the bill adhere to the chamber’s Byrd Rule, which governs the reconciliation process.

It’s Democrats’ big moment to try to force some policies out of the bill by arguing they violate the Byrd Rule. If Democrats succeed on major provisions, that could make things even harder for Senate Republican leaders as they struggle over their vote and deficit math.

The Senate Finance Committee’s text came out last so it’ll be the final panel to go through the process. Finance’s Byrd Bath is likely to start later this week and could extend into next week. Parliamentarian rulings on the committee’s text could still be rolling in around the middle of next week.

Here are some pieces of Republicans’ bill we expect Democrats to challenge:

 Gun and silencer provisions in Finance’s text. In addition to cutting taxes on certain guns and suppressors, aka silencers, the bill eases licensing and registration requirements too.

 Social Security number requirements for tax benefits under Finance, which aim to exclude undocumented immigrants. On the child tax credit, a new provision would require at least one parent to have a work-eligible SSN in addition to their child.

Senate problems. The Senate GOP leadership is lobbying groups of Republican holdouts to try to build a 51-vote coalition for the bill. Senate Majority Leader John Thune and Majority Whip John Barrasso met  on Tuesday with conservatives pushing for steeper spending cuts.

That’s one group that Republican leaders will need to get on board. But the problem is that the deeper spending cuts conservatives are seeking could further alienate GOP moderates, particularly on Medicaid.

“I’ve got major concerns, that’s all there is to it,” Justice said. The freshman GOP senator wants to go back to the House language on provider taxes in order to help rural hospitals. “It’s an aggressive timeline, that’s for sure.”

Vance’s Tuesday message to Republicans seems to be tailored to conservatives seeking more spending cuts. Here’s how Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) described Vance’s plea at Republicans’ closed-door lunch:

“This bill is as close to perfect as you can make it in the current situation. And we need it to pass because it’s better than not passing it.”

Hearing of this a lot from Senate Republican leaders . . . failure can not be an option as the consequences are too dire. Consequences includes being forced to negotiate with Democrats on the debt limit and the expiration of the 2017 Trump tax cuts at the end of this year.

Senate GOP leaders are banking on the pressure getting to the GOP holdouts at the later stages of the reconciliation debate. Such has not happened yet.

House negotiations. If Senate Republicans don’t work out problems with the House, they risk delaying the bill even further.

GOP senators are well aware that they have a big problem when it comes to SALT. They don’t want to spend the money on SALT relief a handful of blue-state House Republicans are demanding. SALT backers insist they’ll hold the line and bring down the reconciliation package if necessary.