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Senator Ron Johnson says

Washington-as the Senate is preparing to take into account the extensive domestic package that Republicans adopted the Republicans of the Republicans last week, said Senator Ron Johnson, R-WIS.

The Republican of Wisconsin criticized the effects of the law on the deficit and characterized the oversized expenses as “the future of our children”. The impartial congress office has estimated that the bill would add 2.3 trillion US dollars to the federal deficit over 10 years.

In an interview about CNN's “State of the Union”, Johnson said that the Republicans of the Congress should examine the expenditure “Line for Line to Doge” to find areas to eliminate.

The Senator's criticism, when the Senate is prepared, is to examine changes to the house law that was passed in a single voice, and another struggle for the government's deficit, the financing of programs and try to develop the expenditure before the aim of the Republican to send a final version of the draft law to President Donald Trump's desk until July 4.

Several Republicans in the Senate have expressed skepticism compared to aspects of the draft law for what they see as inadequate expenses or a shrinking access of Medicaid, and have promised to change it. All changes to the invoice would have to be approved by the house before going to Trump.

Trump said reporters on Sunday that he expected the Senate to make changes to the financing package “rather significant” changes, but was confident that the invoice would ultimately exist and reach its desk.

“I want the Senate and the senators to change, you know that changes make, and we will go back into the house and we will see if we can get them,” said Trump. “In some cases, these changes may be something that I would agree to.”

Senator Rand Paul, R-Ky.

“The problem is that mathematics do not add up,” said Paul, adding: “You will explode the debts.”

Senator Josh Hawley, R-Mo., Also criticizes potential medicaid cuts. According to estimates by the congress budget, the draft law, which is passed in its current form, will reserve health insurance for around 8.6 million people.

Hawley told NBC News Shortly after the house said goodbye that “the Senate basically writes its own version of this bill, and I just want to make sure that there are no Medicaid performance cuts.”

In an op-ET in the New York Times at the beginning of this month, Hawley accused a wing of the Republican party to “want the Republicans to build our large, beautiful, beautiful calculation to assure work insurance for the working arms”.

“But this argument is both morally wrong and politically suicidal,” said Hawley.

When asked during a Sunday interview in CBS News' “Face the Nation”, to respond to Hawley's comments, said the spokesman for House, Mike Johnson, R-La.

The House spokesman repeatedly defended the effects of the invoice on people who would lose the coverage of Medicaid, and acted the invoice as the goal of waste, fraud and abuse under Medicaid users. In an interview about CNN's “State of the Union”, he said that the Medicaid Republican did not reduce Medicaid and argued that “the number of Americans affected are those who are involved in our work to eliminate fraud and abuse”.

The spokesman referred to “illegal foreigners on Medicaid” and said that “Medicaid is not intended for non-US citizens”. Certain American citizens can register for state health options.

Johnson also criticized “Young men who have Medicaid and do not work.” He argued that people “fraud” by “decided not to work if they can”.

Anchor Jake Tapper asked Johnson whether he believed that if one of his voters was losing services like Medicaid, this is because they should not have received these advantages “because they had committed waste, fraud or abuse”.

“Yes,” replied Johnson. “Look, like every district in America, my district has people who are on the program that shouldn't do it.”

Democrats have confiscated potential Medicaid cuts, passed the domestic legislative templates of the Republicans and worked on characterizing the GOP as ready to reduce health insurance options for poor people and at the same time increase the wealth of Americans with higher incomes.

NBC News previously reported that Trump visited the Republicans of the house during the negotiations on the law last week and, according to two legislators present, “not with Medicaid”.

The spokesman for the House of Representatives said during several interviews on Sunday morality that he asked the Senate Republicans to make as few changes to the legislative template as possible. Ultimately, the house and the Senate have to reconcile different versions of the law before going to Trump's desk to be signed in the law.

“I ate with the Republican colleagues of the Senate on Tuesday, her weekly lunch, and I encouraged her to remember that we are a team,” said Johnson in CBS News. “Together there are the Senate and the Republicans of the House, who will deliver this ball over the goal line, so to speak. And I encouraged them to make as few changes as possible, and remembered that I have a very sensitive balance.”

The draft law passed the house 215-214, with two Republicans opposed the draft law, a voice “present” and two.

The house minority manager Hakeem Jeffries, DN.Y., criticized the law last week and said: “Trump had promised to love and appreciate Medicaid”.

“Instead, his only big ugly calculation is the greatest health care in the history of our country,” said Jeffries in a statement. “Millions of people lose their medicaid cover and hardworking American taxpayers will be forced to pay higher premiums, copays and deductible.”

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