President Donald Trump’s main tax lower and spending invoice handed the Home on Thursday, however not with out some Republican opposition.
Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania voted in opposition to the laws alongside the whole Home Democratic Caucus.
Whereas Massie and Fitzpatrick had been the one GOP members to vote no, a number of Home GOP hardliners had been angered by the adjustments made to the invoice by the Senate and there was an in a single day scramble by Speaker Mike Johnson to safe the required help to proceed. Among the hardliners who in the end voted sure say President Trump made promises to get their votes, together with that he’d make the invoice “higher” sooner or later.
On Thursday, Massie stated he didn’t vote for the invoice due to its projected influence on the nationwide debt. The nonpartisan Congressional Finances Workplace estimated the invoice might add $3.4 trillion to the deficit over the following decade.
“Though there have been some conservative wins within the funds reconciliation invoice (OBBBA), I voted No on ultimate passage as a result of it can considerably enhance U.S. funds deficits within the close to time period, negatively impacting all People via sustained inflation and excessive rates of interest,” Massie wrote on X. Massie additionally opposed the Home model of the megabill that handed again in Might.
Trump’s been a vocal critic of Massie, lambasting him final month in a prolonged social media put up as not being “MAGA.”
“Truly, MAGA doesn’t need him, doesn’t know him, and doesn’t respect him,” Trump wrote on the time.
The president accused Massie of being a “grandstander” who routinely votes no on key Republican-led laws. Trump recommended Massie ought to be challenged within the upcoming Republican main, even earlier than this newest vote.
“The excellent news is that we are going to have a beautiful American Patriot operating in opposition to him within the Republican Main, and I’ll be out in Kentucky campaigning actually exhausting,” Trump wrote.
Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick in Washington, Might 9, 2024 and Rep Thomas Massie in Washington, June 27, 2025.
Getty Photos/Reuters
Rep. Fitzpatrick did vote for the Home invoice in Might, however stated on Thursday that the Senate adjustments to the invoice (which resulted in deeper cuts to Medicaid) as the explanation for his change in place.
As I’ve said all through these negotiations, with every iteration of legislative textual content that was positioned on the Home Ground, I’ve maintained a detailed and watchful eye on the particular particulars of those provisions, and decided the particular district influence, optimistic or damaging, on our PA-1 group,” Fitzpatrick stated in a press release.
“I voted to strengthen Medicaid protections, to completely lengthen center class tax cuts, for enhanced small enterprise tax aid, and for historic investments in our border safety and our navy,” he added/ “Nonetheless, it was the Senate’s amendments to Medicaid, along with a number of different Senate provisions, that altered the evaluation for our PA-1 group. The unique Home language was written in a manner that protected our group; the Senate amendments fell in need of our normal.”
“I imagine in, and can at all times battle for, insurance policies which can be considerate, compassionate, and good for our group. It’s this normal that may at all times information my legislative selections,” Fitzpatrick stated.
The Pennsylvania congressman, who additionally faces reelection in 2026, represents a swing district that went blue in 2024 for Kamala Harris.