July 13, 2026

15 thoughts on “Senate Republicans expected to ditch $1bn funding plan for Trump’s ballroom

  1. Think about it: under pressure from Trump, top Republican lawmakers tried to latch the proposal on to a roughly $70bn bill to restore funding to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the border patrol. That speaks volumes.

  2. If top Republicans fear diverting taxpayer dollars toward the White House ballroom will alienate voters before, then the bigger picture starts to look very different.

  3. Under pressure from Trump, top Republican lawmakers tried to latch the proposal on to a roughly $70bn bill to restore funding to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the border patrol. Meanwhile senate Democrats pledged to oppose the funding for Trump’s ballroom, and push “vote after vote” in a bid to force Republicans to publicly endorse it.

  4. The bigger issue here is top Republicans fear diverting taxpayer dollars toward the White House ballroom will alienate voters before. That changes the calculation.

  5. When you look at under pressure from Trump, top Republican lawmakers tried to latch the proposal on to a roughly $70bn bill to restore funding to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the border patrol, the implications are hard to ignore.

  6. If republican John Thune, the US Senate majority leader, acknowledged “ongoing vote issues” with the wider bill on Wednesday, as the party’s leaders try to gauge support, then the bigger picture starts to look very different.

  7. So the bottom line is top Republicans fear diverting taxpayer dollars toward the White House ballroom will alienate voters before. Wonder how this will land.

  8. Reading that republican John Thune, the US Senate majority leader, acknowledged “ongoing vote issues” with the wider bill on Wednesday, as the party’s leaders try to gauge support — hard to argue with the logic there.

  9. The detail about republican John Thune, the US Senate majority leader, acknowledged “ongoing vote issues” with the wider bill on Wednesday, as the party’s leaders try to gauge support is something people should sit with.

  10. The detail about senate Democrats pledged to oppose the funding for Trump’s ballroom, and push “vote after vote” in a bid to force Republicans to publicly endorse it is something people should sit with.

  11. On one hand senate Democrats pledged to oppose the funding for Trump’s ballroom, and push “vote after vote” in a bid to force Republicans to publicly endorse it. But at the same time republican John Thune, the US Senate majority leader, acknowledged “ongoing vote issues” with the wider bill on Wednesday, as the party’s leaders try to gauge support.

  12. Basically senate Democrats pledged to oppose the funding for Trump’s ballroom, and push “vote after vote” in a bid to force Republicans to publicly endorse it. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.

  13. So the bottom line is senate Democrats pledged to oppose the funding for Trump’s ballroom, and push “vote after vote” in a bid to force Republicans to publicly endorse it. Wonder how this will land.

  14. When you look at top Republicans fear diverting taxpayer dollars toward the White House ballroom will alienate voters before, the implications are hard to ignore.

  15. The fact that under pressure from Trump, top Republican lawmakers tried to latch the proposal on to a roughly $70bn bill to restore funding to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the border patrol really puts things into perspective.

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