The spokesman for House, Mike Johnson, is preparing for a budget reconciliation process that will try to codify a lot of the Trump fiscal agenda.
After the Republicans control the house, the Senate and the White House, the party leaders are working on putting together a draft law that will force this agenda as part of the reconciliation process -which means that they will handle the 60 votes in the Senate and get one Bill can go through with a straightforward majority.
Both parties have used reconciliation to say goodbye to political agenda elements. Among the recent attempts to enforce the Democrats with the lend a hand of the then Senator Joe Manchin to the “Inflation Reducation Act”. But now the tables have turned and the Republicans see the possibility of codifying tax cuts, reduced expenses, medicaid reforms and more in a draft law for which no filibuster-proof majority in the Senate is required.
On Wednesday morning, Johnson joined me in Acadiana’s morning messages, and we were allowed to reconciliation, the executive power of budget reconciliation, the executive power and about the groups Boyz II men (Johnson and I are both fans, and the spokesman, and the speaker, and the speaker, and the speaker, and the speaker, and the speaker, and the speaker, and the speaker, and the speaker, and the speaker, and the speaker, and the speaker, and the speaker, and the speaker, that “half of half of half of half have written soundtrack of our lives”).
Johnson and President Donald Trump are on the same side, and the spokesman notices that Trump still demands “a big, beautiful bill”. Both the president and the speaker agree that this draft law, the reconciliation law that we should soon see, is gone to lead the necessary reforms in state expenditure.
You can listen to the spokesman’s full interview with me and my common co-moderator from Jamie Fishing below. Acadianas Morgennachrichten are live live every weekday from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. Newstalk 96.5 Kpel in Lafayette, Louisiana.

