Be Armed and Ready – the Asymmetrical Battlefield Could Be Here at Home
Women’s Sports Just Aren’t As Entertaining As Men’s Are
This Iranian-American Dem Just Shamed Her Party About the Airstrikes and Trump on...
Pete Hegseth, Vindicated (Part Deux)
Punctuated Living
The New American Century
The Law
The Left Is Petrified That Trump Will Succeed in Iran and Expose Them...
'Hanoi' Jane Typifies Hollywood Idiocy
FDA Cruelly Holding Up Approval of Treatments for Rare Diseases, Despite Children Likely...
10 Reported Dead After Pakistanis Attempt to Storm U.S. Embassy
Trump Calls on Iranian Military to Lay Down Arms or Face Certain Death
Thomas Massie Joins in With Democrat Allies Who Claim That Iran Strikes Are...
Miami Man Gets 4.5 Years in Prison for Possessing 450 Stolen or Counterfeit...
Illegal Immigrant Sentenced to 19 Years Over Alleged $4M Romance, Business Scams
OPINION

Dear Senators, Pass One Big Beautiful Bill

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Dear Senators, Pass One Big Beautiful Bill
AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.

The House passed the One Big Beautiful Bill by a margin of one vote.

Well-deserved kudos have been conveyed to the masterful leadership of Speaker Mike Johnson, who navigated through a minefield to get done what needed to get done.

Advertisement

Now it's up to the Senate.

It's impossible not to think now of the admonition to not let the "perfect be the enemy of the good."

In this massive 1,000-plus-page piece of legislation, there is something to bother everybody.

This is a horrible way to do business. Stuffing complex tax considerations, complex spending considerations, complex entitlements reform together into one massive bill is just not what the American people deserve.

Congress is supposed to be a deliberative body, and legislation like this cannot in any way be viewed as deliberative. To me, the notion that the ways of Washington are being changed, that the swamp is being drained, is just not credible.

That said, I implore the U.S. Senate to step up and get this bill passed. The costs of not doing it far outweigh any benefit of derailing the effort because of opposition to one or two perceived problems.

As I have noted previously, that if one needs to write a book to comment on a piece of legislation, we're on the wrong track.

But this is what we have. There are things in this bill that I like very much, and there are things that I do not like. But for me, the two pillars defining this initiative are enough to say get it done.

Advertisement

One, preventing the expiration of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 and making those tax provisions permanent.

As is always the case, there are many different estimates about what the economic implications of passing this legislation will be. But more pressing to me is what the implications are if it doesn't pass.

Without renewal of these tax provisions, we will have an automatic massive tax increase. It is a nightmare to consider the implications of a massive tax increase, particularly at an economically fragile time such as we are now in.

Anyone that will recall consumer sentiment after the passage of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, until Covid upset everything in 2020, recalls this as a time of economic exuberance.

The unemployment rate in January 2020 was 3.6%, the lowest in more than half a century.

According to Statista.com, consumer sentiment in February 2020, just prior to the COVID-19 shock, was 101. This was compared to February 2025, when it stood at 64.7.

The 2017 Tax and Jobs Act defines our current reality, and allowing it to expire would be a horrible mistake.

Second, this legislation does what we have been waiting for for years. It shuts down taxpayer funds going to abortion providers. Planned Parenthood, a $2 billion conglomerate that performed 400,000-plus abortions last year, is off the public dole.

Advertisement

To this I say, Hallelujah.

The extent to which abortion is accepted and legal in our nation is a blight on our national soul.

There are practical implications. Our culture of life defines our culture of family and children. The unraveling of this culture has profound economic implications for our economy.

The Congressional Budget Office says: "The size and the population's age profile affect the U.S. economy and the federal budget. For instance, the population's size and age structure largely determine the number of people in the labor force and thus affect GDP and federal tax revenues. Those demographic factors also affect federal spending -- for example, the size of the population age 65 or older influences the number of beneficiaries of Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid."

Dear senators, please pass this bill.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement