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Senate Bill Would Make Deep Cuts to Medicaid, Setting Up Fight With House

The proposal would salvage some clean-energy tax credits and phase out others more slowly, making up some of the cost by imposing deeper cuts to Medicaid than the House-passed bill would.

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

The 549-page measure, released by the Senate Finance Committee, outlines changes to Medicaid that would be far more aggressive than the version passed in the House, making millions more Americans subject to a work requirement.

Trump’s $1.1 Billion Public Broadcasting Clawback Faces Pushback in the Senate

Some Republican senators are voicing concern over the House-passed bill that would rescind $9 billion that Congress already approved, including money for NPR and PBS stations in their states.

© Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images

The PBS headquarters in Arlington, Va.

Senate G.O.P. Includes Expanded Fund for Radiation Victims in Policy Bill

The provision, long advocated by Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri, would revive and broaden a law for compensating those who developed serious illnesses from government-caused nuclear contamination.

© Corbis, via Getty Images

A law that expired last year was meant to compensate civilians sickened by the legacy of the nation’s aboveground nuclear testing program, as well as uranium miners.

G.O.P. Senators Want Fewer Cuts to Food Aid, Teeing Up a Fight with the House

Republicans whose constituents rely on nutritional assistance worry that cuts to those programs approved by the House will saddle their states with huge costs and harm low-income children.

© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

“We can’t cut to the bone and hurt people,” Senator Jim Justice of West Virginia said in an interview.
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