TECH billionaire Elon Musk, who had called US president Donald Trump's tax-cut and spending bill a "disgusting abomination", continued his tirade along with hardline conservative Republicans.
The world's richest man on Wednesday (4) invoked Quentin Tarantino’s "Kill Bill" and in series of posts on social media platform X called upon lawmakers to "kill the bill."
“Call your Senator, Call your Congressman, Bankrupting America is NOT ok! KILL the BILL,” Musk wrote.
In another post, Musk wrote, “America is in the fast lane to debt slavery.”
"A new spending bill should be drafted that doesn’t massively grow the deficit."
He was joined by some senate Republican deficit hawks who said the version passed by the House of Representatives last month did not sufficiently cut spending.
Musk had for several months led the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) cost-cutting effort for the Trump administration and stepped down last week.
Though DOGE had set an ambitious target of cutting $2 trillion in spending from the federal budget, but the department could accomplish only a small fraction of that.
The 1,100-page bill would extend corporate and individual tax cuts passed in 2017 during Trump's first term in office, cancel many green-energy incentives passed by Democratic former president Joe Biden and tighten eligibility for health and food programs for the poor.
As per the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) forecast, Trump's 'one big, beautiful bill' would reduce the federal government's revenues by $3.67 trillion over a decade, while reducing spending by $1.25 trillion.
The measure would also lift the federal government's debt ceiling, a step that lawmakers must take some time this summer or risk a devastating default.
Top congressional Republicans rejected Musk's criticism and one White House official on Wednesday (4) called the Tesla CEO's moves "infuriating."
Another White House official, speaking on condition of anonymity, on Wednesday (4) said Musk's complaints represented "one disagreement" in an otherwise harmonious relationship, adding that Trump was committed to getting the bill passed despite Musk's stance.
Asked about Musk's message after a White House meeting with Trump, Senate Majority Leader John Thune promised Congress would get the legislation over the finish line.
"We're a long ways down this track," Thune said. "The wheels are in motion on this. As I said before, failure is not an option. We will get this done, one way or the other."
Other Senate Republicans downplayed Musk's influence.
"I don't think very many senators are that interested in what Elon has to say. It's amusing. But we're serious policymakers. We have to govern, and so we have to deal with reality," Senator Kevin Cramer of North Dakota told reporters.
Narrow majority
With Republicans holding a narrow 53-47 Senate majority, just four "no" votes are enough to scupper any bill that Democrats unite in opposing.
The bill faces opposition from deficit hawks and a handful of rural-state Republicans worried about the scale of cuts to the medicaid health insurance program for low-income Americans.
"We're at $2 trillion in deficits," said Republican Senator Rick Scott of Florida. “We're not going to get interest rates down or inflation under control if we don't balance the budget."
Republican Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin criticized the Trump-backed bill as failing to reverse the trajectory of budget deficits and debt.
"The CBO score is a distraction," Johnson said to reporters. "You're arguing over twigs and leaves, when you're ignoring the forest that's on fire."
Diminishing medical cover
The number of people in the United States without health insurance would increase by 10.9 million by 2034 due to policy changes in the House bill, the CBO said.
Of that number, an estimated 1.4 million people would be undocumented immigrants who would no longer be covered in programs funded by the states.
"This bill has gone from bad to worse," said Democratic Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon, referring to the healthcare cuts.
The CBO update does not include a forecast on the potential macroeconomic effects of the legislation, which will be forthcoming.
Republicans argue that extending existing tax cuts and adding new breaks, which are included in the House bill, would further stimulate the economy.
They made similar arguments in 2017 that tax cuts would pay for themselves by stimulating economic growth, but the CBO estimates the changes increased the federal deficit by just under $1.9 trillion over a decade, even when including positive economic effects.
The bill would also fund Trump's crackdown on immigration, adding tens of thousands of border guards and creating the capacity to deport up to 1 million people each year.
Regulations on firearm silencers would be loosened.
Democrats blast the bill as disproportionately benefiting the wealthy while cutting benefits for working Americans. The measure is now awaiting action in the Senate.
The Republican-controlled Congress so far has not rejected any of Trump's legislative requests.






The couple during their visit to the Taj Mahal in Agra earlier this yearxx





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