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Politics Politics Politics

Big Beautiful Bill Squeaks Through The House! Making Sense Of Our World At War (with Ryan McBeth)

Politics Politics Politics

Justin Robert Young

Election, History, Trump, White, Government, House, Riots, Mail, Biden, News, Politics

4.6870 Ratings

🗓️ 23 May 2025

⏱️ 100 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The madman did it. Mike Johnson pushed the Big Beautiful Bill through the House in a razor-thin 215–214 vote, with one Republican voting present. It happened in the early hours of the morning, after an all-night session where, reportedly, one GOP member literally fell asleep during the vote. It’s wild how this keeps happening: Johnson, backed by Trump, threads the needle just enough to claim victory — first on his own speakership, then on the budget, and now on the crown jewel of Trump’s second-term domestic agenda.

The vote was close, but this wasn’t chaos. It was strategy. Johnson avoided making promises, waited out the loudest factions, and let Trump do the squeezing. First, the SALT caucus got its $40,000 cap. Then, once the blue-state Republicans were on board, the House Freedom Caucus got summoned to the White House. Trump made it clear — get in line. And they mostly did.

What’s Actually in the Bill

The bill itself is massive. It permanently extends the 2017 Trump tax cuts. It temporarily exempts tips, overtime, and auto loan interest from taxes through 2028. It raises the SALT deduction cap to $40,000 for households earning up to $500,000. It imposes work requirements on Medicaid recipients aged 18 to 65 who don’t have disabilities or young children. It bans Medicaid and CHIP from covering gender-affirming care. It cuts federal funding to states offering Medicaid to undocumented immigrants.

Then there’s the border and defense spending: $46.5 billion for the wall, $4.1 billion for more Border Patrol agents, $1,000 asylum application fees, nearly $150 billion for defense, including missile shields and naval expansion. It throws in a Trump Savings Account for kids, expands 529s for education, and guts clean energy tax credits earlier than expected. This is not a modest proposal. This is the full kitchen sink — and it cleared the House.

The Congressional Budget Office says it’ll add $3.8 trillion to the deficit over the next decade. For a party that used to live and die by fiscal restraint, it’s a hell of a turn. And yet, what’s striking is that Democrats are the ones now talking about debt again. The shift is real. But the counterargument is simple: we’ve been living under this tax structure for seven years. Making it permanent just formalizes the status quo. The new spending and credits? That’s where the fight will be.

Next Stop: The Senate Wall

None of this becomes law unless it gets through the Senate — and that’s a very different battlefield. The GOP has three votes to spare. And their best lobbyist is JD Vance, who’s barely spent any time in the chamber. This is not the House. Rand Paul is a hard no. Ron Johnson is already calling out the deficit. Susan Collins is watching the optics. McConnell still looms over the process, even if he’s stepping back from leadership.

The House version of this bill isn’t making it. Changes are coming — the question is whether they come from the right or the left. Johnson’s strategy got him this far. But in the Senate, Trump’s grip isn’t as strong, and the margin is even tighter. The message is clear: they passed it out of the House, but the real negotiation starts now.

Chapters

00:00:00 - Intro

00:03:12 - Big Beautiful Bill Passes House

00:13:34 - Interview with Ryan McBeth

00:46:17 - Update

00:47:21 - Israeli Embassy Shooting

01:02:26 - Senate Bill Response

01:04:15 - Texas Hemp Ban

01:06:06 - Interview with Ryan McBeth, cont.

01:34:29 - Wrap-up



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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

On this edition of the podcast, war! We go all over the world. Talk about war, Indian Pakistan,

0:08.1

Israel, Gaza, Russia, Ukraine, and so much more with Ryan Macbeth. Also, the big beautiful bill

0:14.9

passes the House. What is in store for it in the Senate and a tragedy on the streets of Washington, D.C.

0:23.0

as two members of the Israeli embassy are shot dead.

0:25.8

It is all coming up.

0:31.0

The following is brought to you by just another pilot.

0:38.3

Politics, politics, politics, politics.

0:40.3

Hello and welcome everybody to the politics, politics, politics,

0:59.5

program for May 23rd, 2025-year-old pal, Justin Robert Young,

1:04.5

joining you here in Austin, Texas, bringing you into the weekend with an expansive conversation about war.

1:16.4

Ryan Macbeth here with us, traipsing the globe, talking about military engagements,

1:22.5

and I think we pretty much hit everything.

1:35.6

Israel, Iran, Russia, Ukraine, India, Pakistan, the gamut. And then, of course, you can't talk about World War without talking about

1:43.2

China.

1:50.0

Ryan is always a great, great, great resource for stuff like this.

1:59.2

And I know he has been incredibly critical of the Trump administration's handling of the war in Ukraine. But I was curious to get his perspective on what's

2:04.1

happening now. It seems as if the Trump administration is getting a little fed up with old

2:09.6

Vladimir Putin. We'll get to him in a second. We're going to have an update on where the big beautiful bill is going in the Senate.

2:23.1

We are going to talk about hemp being made illegal here on the home front in Austin.

2:31.7

And we are going to discuss a real tragedy, which is that two young people

2:37.9

murdered in cold blood on the streets of Washington, D.C., both members of the Israeli embassy,

2:49.0

with the assailant now charged for crimes that could earn him the death penalty

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