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The white house has immigration measures in Trump's 'Still Led' tax bill

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With President Donald Trump's legislative agenda, the White House turned to the sale of the legislation as an important part of his enforcement efforts of immigration at the weekend.

Trump was dealt with a rare setback in the congress on May 16 when five Republicans voted against the President's legislative committee with the Democrats in the Household Committee of the President, which includes tax cuts, measures to implement immigration and other GOP priorities. Trump described it as “a large, beautiful bill”.

The GOP legislators who oppose legislation wanted deeper spending cuts. As written, the law would have added the 36.2 trillion dollar of the federal government in the next decade to add trillion dollars.

The White House fought to maintain the votes to advance the bill and focus on measures to implement immigration within legislation that are popular in the GOP.

The legislation would provide funds to increase Trump's deportation efforts, as the White House found in a press release on May 17th.

“Simply put, the big beautiful bill will enable great deportations,” says the publication.

Trump's deportation tactic was controversial. He has rely on a law of the 18th century on a law of war to quickly remove migrants, to draw symptoms and to say the judicial challenges that his administration deprives people the right to proper procedure. The case of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a man from Maryland, who was incorrectly sent to a notorious prison in El Salvador, has attracted considerable attention. However, a stronger enforcement of immigration is a uniform message for a GOP congress that has divided how a package of tax and expenditure can be designed.

MEP Nick Lalota, R-New York, said on May 17 that the laws in contradiction to reduce expenditure in contradiction to reduce expenditure and proposes to increase income by making tax cuts expired during Trump's first administration.

Lalota proposed to enable the tax rate from 37% to 39.6% for people who earn more than $ 609,350, and married couples who earn more than $ 731,200 and said that he “breathes” $ 300 billion in the amount of life “and is in line with the new focus of the GOP Workers' class.

“The only big beautiful bill has stalled -and it takes wind in the sails. So that the top tax rate fails … breathes the efforts of 300 billion US dollars,” wrote Lalota on social media.

Trump said that he would not mind increasing taxes on high earners, but he is worried about politics.

The President asked the Republicans to come together and support his legislation, and published on social media on May 16 that “we do not need” stands “in the Republican Party.

“Stop talking and do it!” Added.

GOP legislators who voted against Trump's legislative proposal said they hoped to achieve a contract with the spokesman for House, Mike Johnson, to change the legislation at the weekend.

Contribution: Reuters

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