Schumer Used Hours-Long Tactic To Delay ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’ Vote

 

Senate Democrats’ delay tactics have come to an end, but Senate Republicans are still some distance from holding a final vote on President Donald Trump’s “Big, Beautiful Bill.”

On Saturday, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) employed a procedural maneuver requiring Senate clerks to read aloud the full text of the 940-page GOP-backed bill. The reading stretched well into Sunday, taking nearly 16 hours to complete, Fox News reported.

Ahead of the ultimately successful—though contentious—procedural vote, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer announced he would require clerks to read the entire bill aloud. After the nearly 16-hour reading concluded, Schumer posted on X, saying, “Republicans are squirming.”

“I know damn well they haven’t read the bill, so we’re going to make them,” he said, though Democrats rarely read their own lengthy bills, lending some to criticize Schumer’s action as a political stunt.

It’s a rarely used tactic that Schumer and Senate Democrats employed as part of their broader strategy to pressure Republicans, following the GOP’s continued refusal to seriously engage with much of President Trump’s legislative agenda.

The last time Senate clerks were required to read an entire bill on the floor was in 2021, when Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) objected and demanded that then-President Joe Biden’s American Rescue Plan be read aloud, Fox noted.

With the reading now complete, the Senate moves forward with 20 hours of debate, evenly divided between Democrats and Republicans. Senate Democrats are expected to use their full allotment, while Republicans are likely to use only a few hours.

Much of the GOP’s debate time will be taken up by critics of the bill, such as Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), whose support for final passage remains doubtful. However, Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) may have more than just Paul to contend with as the process unfolds.

Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) is unlikely to reverse his position and support the bill’s final passage—despite public criticism from President Trump and the threat of a primary challenger—unless significant changes are made to the Medicaid provisions in the legislation.

Tillis reinforced his opposition by announcing he would retire at the end of his term, choosing to avoid what could be a tough primary fight.

Meanwhile, Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), who backed the bill in the initial procedural vote, has also called for meaningful revisions, specifically to the Medicaid provider tax rate.

Then there are the fiscal hawks, who delayed Saturday night’s vote while negotiating with Thune—assisted by Vice President JD Vance—to secure an amendment addressing the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP), which determines how much the federal government contributes to each state’s Medicaid program.

Adjustments to FMAP remain unpopular among most Senate Republicans, except for a bloc of fiscal conservatives pushing for deeper spending cuts in the massive legislation.

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