The Japan Times - Senate Republicans move forward with Trump tax cuts

EUR -
AED 4.135422
AFN 80.48768
ALL 100.458754
AMD 440.318694
ANG 2.015603
AOA 1033.579845
ARS 1211.900578
AUD 1.811298
AWG 2.029442
AZN 1.866045
BAM 1.988355
BBD 2.274317
BDT 136.859563
BGN 1.961764
BHD 0.424419
BIF 3296.64762
BMD 1.125904
BND 1.505232
BOB 7.783226
BRL 6.626283
BSD 1.126433
BTN 97.002623
BWP 15.88683
BYN 3.686221
BYR 22067.72314
BZD 2.262605
CAD 1.571036
CDF 3239.226393
CHF 0.923889
CLF 0.029029
CLP 1113.958159
CNY 8.235422
CNH 8.223334
COP 4921.045965
CRC 579.177634
CUC 1.125904
CUP 29.836462
CVE 112.534289
CZK 25.091884
DJF 200.095317
DKK 7.466716
DOP 69.686921
DZD 149.479538
EGP 57.782755
ERN 16.888564
ETB 146.591916
FJD 2.582993
FKP 0.881638
GBP 0.866524
GEL 3.107006
GGP 0.881638
GHS 17.44407
GIP 0.881638
GMD 81.148004
GNF 9742.588021
GTQ 8.686476
GYD 235.349983
HKD 8.734613
HNL 29.069489
HRK 7.539396
HTG 147.6441
HUF 417.582355
IDR 19073.935086
ILS 4.229461
IMP 0.881638
INR 97.610982
IQD 1471.72593
IRR 47393.920478
ISK 147.984158
JEP 0.881638
JMD 177.804396
JOD 0.798274
JPY 161.68093
KES 145.776302
KGS 97.836617
KHR 4496.189554
KMF 501.706511
KPW 1013.328696
KRW 1658.666235
KWD 0.346308
KYD 0.933697
KZT 586.280824
LAK 24341.775125
LBP 101136.807261
LKR 335.810499
LRD 224.919517
LSL 22.324448
LTL 3.324503
LVL 0.681049
LYD 5.456726
MAD 10.688437
MDL 19.965733
MGA 5218.771725
MKD 62.749201
MMK 2363.574113
MNT 3951.963754
MOP 8.993374
MRU 44.505335
MUR 50.536828
MVR 17.384003
MWK 1950.206511
MXN 23.214175
MYR 5.062872
MZN 71.928927
NAD 22.324448
NGN 1769.375486
NIO 41.388212
NOK 12.125762
NPR 156.250779
NZD 1.958282
OMR 0.433497
PAB 1.125904
PEN 4.231334
PGK 4.635233
PHP 64.528921
PKR 315.672762
PLN 4.373799
PYG 9020.262576
QAR 4.097969
RON 5.076731
RSD 119.475157
RUB 97.079763
RWF 1590.911361
SAR 4.222208
SBD 9.553021
SCR 16.338844
SDG 675.915551
SEK 11.066124
SGD 1.517632
SHP 0.884784
SLE 25.647913
SLL 23609.650218
SOS 643.075303
SRD 41.289518
STD 23303.944615
SVC 9.85099
SYP 14639.365866
SZL 22.324448
THB 38.691666
TJS 12.226338
TMT 3.939614
TND 3.462872
TOP 2.718831
TRY 42.862184
TTD 7.645059
TWD 37.00364
TZS 3004.23592
UAH 46.549314
UGX 4161.96253
USD 1.125904
UYU 48.364454
UZS 14547.617984
VES 83.024707
VND 29297.464523
VUV 142.067564
WST 3.247306
XAF 668.942014
XAG 0.0362
XAU 0.000353
XCD 3.046939
XDR 0.845976
XOF 668.942014
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.507396
ZAR 21.959648
ZMK 10134.4861
ZMW 31.555171
ZWL 362.540707
  • RBGPF

    -7.7300

    60.27

    -12.83%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3400

    8.86

    -3.84%

  • SCS

    -0.4000

    10.21

    -3.92%

  • CMSC

    -0.4500

    22.15

    -2.03%

  • VOD

    -0.1300

    8.45

    -1.54%

  • BTI

    0.3400

    40.55

    +0.84%

  • AZN

    -1.8900

    64.87

    -2.91%

  • RIO

    -0.7400

    54.87

    -1.35%

  • NGG

    0.3800

    65.59

    +0.58%

  • GSK

    -0.8800

    33.6

    -2.62%

  • RELX

    0.4800

    49.02

    +0.98%

  • BCC

    -3.7600

    94.68

    -3.97%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    20.98

    -0.1%

  • JRI

    -0.2250

    11.765

    -1.91%

  • CMSD

    -0.5500

    22.2

    -2.48%

  • BP

    -1.6700

    26.23

    -6.37%

Senate Republicans move forward with Trump tax cuts
Senate Republicans move forward with Trump tax cuts / Photo: Drew ANGERER - AFP

Senate Republicans move forward with Trump tax cuts

US senators on Saturday approved a budget blueprint unlocking trillions of dollars for sweeping tax cuts promised by President Donald Trump, despite bitter infighting among the majority Republicans over the savings that will be needed to fund them.

Text size:

Working deep into the night, lawmakers voted 51-48, mostly along party lines, to approve the resolution, with two prominent Republicans opposing the measure.

It now moves to the House of Representatives, where Republicans hold a slim majority, and where hard-liners and fiscal hawks have criticized the Senate version.

The Senate vote came at a time when Trump's sweeping tariffs imposed on dozens of trading partners sent global stocks plummeting, with Democrats arguing that now is not the time to be entertaining significantly reduced government spending.

"President Trump's tariff tax is one of the dumbest things he has ever done as president, and that's saying something," CNN quoted Democratic minority leader Chuck Schumer as saying.

Schumer submitted an amendment targeting Trump's tariffs, but it did not receive enough support for adoption.

Republican senators Susan Collins of Maine and Rand Paul of Kentucky joined the Democrats in opposing the budget resolution.

But nearly every Republican stood by the president, with Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana saying in a brief statement: "President Trump wants to balance the budget and decrease our debt. I agree."

- Depth of cuts -

Senate and House Republicans have been at loggerheads over how deeply to wield the knife, with lawmakers already wary of public anger over an unprecedented downsizing of the federal bureaucracy led by Trump's tech billionaire advisor Elon Musk.

Both chambers need to adopt identical versions of the budget blueprint -- a task that has proven beyond them during months of fraught talks -- before they can draft Trump's giant bill to extend his first-term tax cuts and boost border security and energy production.

"This bill lays the groundwork to provide additional funding to keep the border secure, grow our energy dominance, build a strong national defense, cut wasteful spending and prevent a tax increase on families and small businesses," Republican Senator James Lankford said after the vote.

Senators spent much of the all-night session voting on dozens of proposed tweaks to the plan -- in a so-called "vote-a-rama" -- with some proposals aimed at forcing Republicans onto the record over Trump's tariffs on imports from countries around the world.

Having made it through the Senate, the spending plan still needs approval by the House, with Republican leaders desperate to get it to Trump's desk before Congress begins a two-week Easter break next Friday.

Democrats have slammed the framework, claiming it will trigger further major cuts to essential services.

- 'Dead on arrival' -

The proposal would raise the country's borrowing limit by $5 trillion to avoid a debt default this summer, staving off the need for a further hike until after the 2026 midterm elections.

Experts say the tax cuts -- which would greatly expand the relief agreed in 2017 -- could add in excess of $5 trillion to the national debt over the next decade.

The libertarian Cato Institute called the resolution a "fiscal train wreck" that "actively worsens our nation's debt trajectory."

Trump, who has talked up the plan on social media, offered his "complete and total support" for the text at a White House event earlier in the week.

But Senate and House Republicans have been oceans apart on spending cuts, with the upper chamber looking for modest savings of $4 billion, while House leadership is demanding a reduction of $1.5 trillion.

Republican Congressman Ralph Norman of South Carolina, a hard-line conservative, was asked about supporting the Senate resolution and told reporters: "To me, it's dead on arrival."

Y.Kimura--JT