US President Donald Trump signalled on Tuesday that he wants to drop the name “One Big Beautiful Bill” for his signature domestic legislation, admitting the label that helped rally Republican support does little to explain its contents.
Speaking at a Cabinet meeting, Trump said, “Last month, in a landmark achievement, I also proudly signed the largest working-class tax cuts in American history. So the bill that, I’m not going to use the term ‘great, big, beautiful’, that was good for getting it approved, but it’s not good for explaining to people what it’s all about. It’s a massive tax cut for the middle class,” according to NBC News.
The legislation, passed without Democratic support, extends Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, creates new tax deductions such as exemptions on tips, increases spending on immigration enforcement and the military, while offsetting costs through deep cuts to Medicaid, food assistance and clean energy funding.
The Congressional Budget Office has projected it will add $3.4 trillion to the deficit over the next decade, while potentially stripping millions of health coverage. As per USA Today, Senate estimates suggest 12 to 20 million Americans could lose insurance due to nearly $1 trillion in Medicaid cuts .
Despite the White House pitch, polling shows public resistance. A Pew Research Center survey earlier this month found 46% disapprove of the law, with just 32% in support. A CNN-SSRS poll in July put opposition at 61%.
Democrats have branded it a giveaway to the wealthy “funded on the backs of the working class.”
Even Republicans acknowledge branding woes. As per Politico, Trump had pressed GOP leaders to name the measure “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” but strategists are now urging a rebrand under titles such as the “Working Family Tax Cuts Bill.”
Sen Katie Britt recently adopted that phrasing in a social media post, crediting Trump with delivering “much-needed funding, technology, and support for rural hospitals.”
Vice President JD Vance has toured battleground states including Pennsylvania, Georgia and Wisconsin to promote the tax provisions, while GOP lawmakers held August town halls to push back against constituent anger.
However, many admit that the challenge extends beyond the name. “We have to do better at selling the megabill,” one House Republican was quoted as saying by Politico.
Democrats, meanwhile, have seized on the law’s vulnerabilities. Former Rep Abigail Spanberger, running for Virginia governor, launched an ad blasting it as legislation that “raises health care costs, raises mortgages, raises the price of electricity and gas.”
For Trump, the pivot is clear: the “beautiful” branding that carried the bill through Congress may have run its course. Now, he and Republicans are racing to convince voters that the package delivers more than it takes away.
Speaking at a Cabinet meeting, Trump said, “Last month, in a landmark achievement, I also proudly signed the largest working-class tax cuts in American history. So the bill that, I’m not going to use the term ‘great, big, beautiful’, that was good for getting it approved, but it’s not good for explaining to people what it’s all about. It’s a massive tax cut for the middle class,” according to NBC News.
The legislation, passed without Democratic support, extends Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, creates new tax deductions such as exemptions on tips, increases spending on immigration enforcement and the military, while offsetting costs through deep cuts to Medicaid, food assistance and clean energy funding.
The Congressional Budget Office has projected it will add $3.4 trillion to the deficit over the next decade, while potentially stripping millions of health coverage. As per USA Today, Senate estimates suggest 12 to 20 million Americans could lose insurance due to nearly $1 trillion in Medicaid cuts .
Despite the White House pitch, polling shows public resistance. A Pew Research Center survey earlier this month found 46% disapprove of the law, with just 32% in support. A CNN-SSRS poll in July put opposition at 61%.
Democrats have branded it a giveaway to the wealthy “funded on the backs of the working class.”
Even Republicans acknowledge branding woes. As per Politico, Trump had pressed GOP leaders to name the measure “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” but strategists are now urging a rebrand under titles such as the “Working Family Tax Cuts Bill.”
Sen Katie Britt recently adopted that phrasing in a social media post, crediting Trump with delivering “much-needed funding, technology, and support for rural hospitals.”
Vice President JD Vance has toured battleground states including Pennsylvania, Georgia and Wisconsin to promote the tax provisions, while GOP lawmakers held August town halls to push back against constituent anger.
However, many admit that the challenge extends beyond the name. “We have to do better at selling the megabill,” one House Republican was quoted as saying by Politico.
Democrats, meanwhile, have seized on the law’s vulnerabilities. Former Rep Abigail Spanberger, running for Virginia governor, launched an ad blasting it as legislation that “raises health care costs, raises mortgages, raises the price of electricity and gas.”
For Trump, the pivot is clear: the “beautiful” branding that carried the bill through Congress may have run its course. Now, he and Republicans are racing to convince voters that the package delivers more than it takes away.
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