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In a spectacle that blended high-stakes governance with raw political theater, the U.S. Senate stayed locked in an extraordinary overnight session, straining toward passage of former President Donald Trump’s self-branded “One Big, Beautiful Bill.”

The legislation, sprawling across tax cuts, defense hikes, and major cuts to social programs, turned the Senate floor into a battleground of ideological identity for Republicans—and a stage for Democrats to showcase their resistance.

Bill Sparks Blistering Debates Amid Republican Divide

From the outset Monday morning, according to CNN, Senate Majority Leader John Thune had warned the day would blur into the next. He was right: the so-called vote-a-rama—a marathon series of amendment votes—stretched late into the night and into dawn.

At stake was an immense package worth $3.3 trillion, which Republicans claimed would extend tax relief for the middle class and protect the nation’s credit by lifting the debt ceiling by $5 trillion. But buried within were provisions that alarmed moderates and Democrats alike: severe Medicaid cuts, reductions in food aid, and reversals of clean-energy incentives.

Sen. Ron Johnson, a Republican holdout, ultimately backed the procedural vote, though he called the process “deeply flawed.” Meanwhile, Senators Lisa Murkowski and Susan Collins cast symbolic votes with Democrats to preserve social spending, though they too advanced the bill procedurally.

“This is a defining moment for our party,” said Johnson. “Do we govern, or do we posture?”

Democrats, led by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, seized the moment to paint the bill as a giveaway to the wealthy, describing it as “a raid on working families.”

Outside the chamber, the pressure grew even hotter. Elon Musk launched scathing posts on X, denouncing Republicans for what he called “fiscally suicidal pork-barrel spending.” Conservative groups threatened primary challenges to any GOP senator backing final passage.

A Theatrical All-Nighter and a Murky Path Ahead

In between bleary-eyed votes, lawmakers caught catnaps in cloakrooms or conferred in hushed huddles. Staffers carted in fast-food and coffee as the chamber slogged through amendment after amendment—some substantive, others purely symbolic.

By sunrise, the Senate narrowly passed a procedural hurdle, clearing the way for a final vote potentially as early as Tuesday evening. But a tangle of political obstacles remained.

House conservatives, particularly the emboldened Freedom Caucus, have already declared the Senate version dead on arrival. Even some House Republicans aligned with Trump signaled unease over the ballooning deficit estimates.

The next 48 hours will be decisive: if the Senate can finalize the bill, it will return to the House, which must either swallow the changes or force further negotiations. Any delay could push consideration perilously close to the government funding and debt ceiling deadlines later this summer.

A Test of Republican Identity

For Trump, the bill has become a personal crusade. “It’s the biggest, most beautiful legislation ever,” he declared in a Truth Social video. Yet the spectacle of Republicans fighting each other—and the image of the Senate locked in overnight combat—underscores how far the party remains from a unified governing vision.

In the end, this marathon session was more than a policy fight: it was a referendum on whether Republicans can reconcile their competing factions in an era when performative politics often trumps consensus.

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