House Republicans Scramble for Tax Deal Following Trump Meeting

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(Bloomberg) -- House Republican leaders worked frantically Wednesday night to resolve divisions over Medicaid and green energy provisions in Donald Trump’s signature tax bill that threaten plans to vote on it this week.

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Opposition from some hardliners began to soften after an afternoon White House meeting with Trump, with Representative Andy Biggs throwing his support behind the bill. Representative Ralph Norman, once a firm opponent who did not attend the White House meeting, appeared more open-minded after speaking with colleagues who met with the president.

“We’re gonna get back together once we see it in writing,” the South Carolina Republican said of the anticipated changes to the bill.

House Speaker Mike Johnson can only lose a few votes and still pass the bill, which is the centerpiece of Trump’s legislative agenda.

Johnson suggested there could be various ways to placate the ultraconservatives — who demand steeper cuts to Medicaid and faster elimination of clean energy tax credits — including by executive order. And Trump said he was “giving very serious consideration” to a public offering for the mortgage giants Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, which could raise hundreds of billions of dollars for the government, a move that would appeal to fiscal hawks.

But just as the tide appeared to be turning in Trump’s favor, problems popped up elsewhere.

New York Republican Andrew Garbarino, who was among the lawmakers who negotiated a favorable deal on the state and local tax deduction earlier Wednesday, signaled concern about proposed changes to accelerate an end to the IRA’s green energy credits.

Doing so “could end up killing projects all over the country that have been announced,” Garbarino told reporters. He said the credits would help the country meet the massive growth expected in electricity demand in the coming decade.

Meanwhile, Representative John Rose of Tennessee added himself to the “no” column late Wednesday, citing concerns about the cost of the deal to raise the SALT cap to $40,000.

Still party leaders said they plan to press forward with a vote as soon as Wednesday.

“We’re going to vote tonight,” House Majority Leader Steve Scalise told reporters.

The White House amped up the pressure on Republicans earlier Wednesday urging lawmakers to quickly approve tax bill, adding in a statement that failure to do so would be the “ultimate betrayal.”