As mid-term battles in 2026 get heated, Big Beautiful Building Hit Campaign Trail


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president Donald Trump When he and the GOP call the “one big beautiful bill” to the law on Friday at the White House, they sign a domestic policy package that he and the GOP call “one big beautiful bill.”

Huge Tax reductions and expenditure invoices This week it passed the House and Senate by thin razor rims along the party line.

But the political battle over the bill is far from the end as it travels from Capitol Hill to the campaign trail.

“I’m deeply concerned about this bill and what it will do. We’ll talk a lot about it,” New Hampshire Democrat Chris Pappas told Fox News Digital on Friday.

Game On: Republicans, Democrats, Trade Fire on Big Beautiful Bill

Big beautiful invoice in a box

The large, beautiful, approximately 940 pages of the bill text will be taken to the US Senate Foor on Saturday, June 28, 2025, at Capitol Hill, Washington, DC, for a clerk to read. (Dance Curry/Fox News)

Papas, who runs in the 2026 race, which is important to retire longtime Sen. Jeanne Shaheen for Democrats’ Republicans, wants to flip and aims for the bill.

“This is a one-party effort and unfortunately we have come to the conclusion that it doesn’t seem good for our nation or ours.”

Trump touts “Big Beautiful Bill” as “Very Popular” despite voting

Former Republican Sen. Scott Brown, who announced his Senate candidacy last month, viewed things differently, praising the president for helping Congressional GOP leaders get bills at their White House desks.

“What he said he was trying to do, he actually ended up. I think it’s very rare for someone in politics to actually do that,” Brown said of Trump.

The bill is packed with Trump’s 2024 campaign trail promises and second term priorities on tax cuts, immigration, defense, energy and debt restrictions.

This includes extending the tax cuts in his signature 2017, as well as tips and elimination of taxes on overtime payments.

By creating his first period tax rate Permanent – they were due to expire later this year – the bill will increase by about $4.4 trillion over the next decade, according to an analysis by the Congressional Budget Office and the Responsible Federal Budget Committee.

“After passing a small final hurdle in Congress, a big beautiful bill on the way to the White House

The measure also provides billions to border security and codifies the president’s controversial immigrant crackdown.

The bill also restructures Medicaid. It is a nearly 60-year federal program offering health insurance to around 71 million low-income Americans. Additionally, Senate Republicans increased Medicaid cuts than the House first passed in late May.

Changes to MedicaidIt was partially drafted as an offset for Trump’s tax cuts, as well as the food stamp cut reduction, which is one of the country’s main safety net programs. The measures include numerous new rules and regulations, including work requirements for many people seeking Medicaid compensation.

The $3.4 trillion legislative package is also projected to surge citizen debt at $4 trillion over the next decade.

Democrats have been denouncement of Republicans for changes to their social safety net for months.

“We’re talking about this bill. The outcome is 46,000 people. New Hampshire You will lose your health insurance. Pappas warned. “And we know that all granite statal premiums can rise as a result of uncovered care costs and burdens on hospitals,” he warned.

Naturalization ceremony

New American Citizens’ Annual Independence Day Naturalization Ceremony held on July 4, 2025 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire (Paulsteinhauser – Fox News)

“We’ve heard from people about this and we’ve been involved with people across the state,” said a fourth term House of Representatives interviewed Fox News on Friday as they arrived at the July 4 naturalization ceremony in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.

Democrats have highlighted the numerous national votes held last month, demonstrating the bill’s popularity in the negative territory.

With a margin of 21 points, voters asked about the latest questions. Fox News National Poll They opposed the bill (38% were supported, compared to 59% opposed).

Check out the latest Fox News Polling

The bill was also underwater in other national surveys conducted last month by the Washington Post (minus 19 points), Pew Research (minus 20 points), and Kinnipiac University (minus 26 points).

Approximately half of respondents questioned in the Fox News poll said the bill hurts families (49%), one quarter thought it would help (23%), and another quarter didn’t think it would make a difference (26%).

The chart shows support for one big beautiful invoice based on Fox News Polly data

Voters surveyed in a poll conducted last month by Fox News, opposed “one big beautiful bill” by a margin of 59% to 38%. (Fox News)

Asked about Democrat criticism over Medicaid cuts, Brown said, “My mother was on welfare. They were a very important program and I’ve already said that people who really need it the most, people with disabilities, people who can’t leave and work, they should have them.”

“It’s for low- and middle-income people, and I support them gaining benefits, but I don’t support who is getting them here illegally,” Brown said.

He added, “I don’t support benefits to people who are healthy and can absolutely go out and volunteer and go out and do work.

What’s actually in Trump’s “big beautiful bill”

Republicans are also attacking the bill and targeting Democrats for opposing tax cuts.

Republicans are highlighting a recent poll conducted by a group alongside the GOP that shows strong support for the bill under the tax cuts clause.

“It’s obvious that we’re still maintaining the 2017 tax cuts. It certainly is important for individuals and businesses,” Brown, who was interviewed by Fox News after marching in Brentwood, New Hampshire on July 4th.

Scott Brown

Former New Hampshire Republican Senate Senator Scott Brown will march in the annual Brentwood at the Brentwood parade on July 4, 2025. (Scott Brown Campaign)

Brown points to Papas, who has owned Manchester’s iconic Puritan Backroom restaurant for over a century, saying, “For someone like Chris Papas, walk to his own restaurant and imagine that to his employee OH, I don’t support your taxes. How do you do it?”

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Asked about the GOP attack, Pappas said, “I support targeting reductions to ensure that I’m targeting that relief to people who add $4 trillion to citizen debt, like this bill, for our small businesses, not for billionaires, and to those who need it.”

“We wanted a bipartisan conversation about taxes and how we could invest in middle class, workers and small businesses, and unfortunately that didn’t happen,” he added.

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