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Trump tax bill passes House by razor-thin margin, heads to Senate for major overhaul

President Donald Trump’s flagship tax legislation scraped through the House of Representatives on Thursday in a narrow 215-214 vote, setting up a contentious debate in the Senate where key Republican lawmakers are already pushing for significant revisions.

The multi-trillion-dollar package includes a $4 trillion hike to the US debt ceiling and a sweeping array of tax changes, many of which extend or expand provisions from Trump’s first term.

The legislation, dubbed by Trump as the “one, big, beautiful bill,” now enters the Senate spotlight with Republican leaders hoping for final passage by August.

The Treasury Department has warned that without a debt ceiling increase, the United States could face a default as early as September.

Bill seeks to raise SALT cap; introduce steep cuts to Medicaid, food stamps

The bill seeks to extend the Trump-era tax cuts set to expire on December 31 and introduces new provisions, such as temporarily exempting tips and overtime pay from taxation and raising the cap on state and local tax (SALT) deductions to $40,000.

The cap will gradually increase by 1% annually over a decade, but phase out for individuals earning more than $500,000.

Spending-wise, the legislation includes $150 billion in additional military funding and $175 billion for immigration enforcement—both areas Trump has prioritized.

There are also $12 billion in reimbursements for state-level border security efforts, benefiting states like Texas.