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President Donald Trump is ready to sign a punishing Russia sanctions bill that GOP hawks have pushed for months. But only if it changes to give him more control.

A senior administration official granted anonymity to discuss the president’s view said that “conceptually there’s an openness” to the bill from Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), but the person suggested that the legislation needs to preserve what the White House sees as the president’s sole authority to oversee U.S. foreign policy.

The current draft of the bill allows the president to waive a 500 percent tariff on countries that buy Russian oil and uranium for up to 180 days, and Graham said Tuesday he has agreed to revise the bill to allow for a second waiver, subject to congressional oversight.

The administration’s desired changes would solidify the president’s waiver authority, ensuring that Congress has no power to question Trump should he decide to end the sanctions.

“The current version would subject the president’s foreign policy decisions to micromanagement by Congress through a joint resolution of disapproval process. … That’s a nonstarter for us,” said the official. “The administration is not going to be micromanaged by the Congress on the president’s foreign policy. The bill needs a waiver authority that is complete.”

Trump’s new willingness to engage with Congress on a sanctions bill underscores his growing frustration with Russian President Vladimir Putin, who he says has rebuffed efforts to negotiate an end to the bloodshed in Ukraine.

“For the president now, he has invested his own reputation of being able to negotiate anything anywhere, and Putin has made him look foolish,” said one Republican operative close to the White House.

Trump said Tuesday that Putin was throwing “a lot of bullshit” at him and that he was “looking very strongly” at the sanctions bill. On Wednesday, Speaker Mike Johnson threw his support behind the sanctions push

“Vladimir Putin has shown an unwillingness to be reasonable and to talk seriously about brokering a peace, and I think we have to send him a message,” he said.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune has been more circumspect, citing both “substantial progress” in working with the White House on the bill but also making clear his desire to get Trump fully onboard. He said in a floor speech Wednesday it was possible the measure could come to the Senate floor this month but offered no guarantee.

But the president’s comments, emphasizing that any additional Russia sanctions would be “at my option,” underlined what aides said is a top priority: maintaining maximum flexibility and total control over U.S. policy toward the Kremlin.

Two people granted anonymity to describe private discussions on Capitol Hill acknowledged that while the White House might broadly be supportive of the sanctions bill, they hadn’t yet reached an agreement with lawmakers on the scope of the waiver authority.

Thune acknowledged in a brief interview that the waiver language remains subject to negotiation.

“We’re still working with them,” he said, adding that they were “trying” to get everyone on the same page.

The White House, asked for comment on the state of play, pointed to Trump’s remarks.

So far, the GOP-controlled Congress has been remarkably pliant in the face of Trump’s pressure, delivering the president’s massive tax and spending package last week and backing the White House’s actions on trade, immigration and war powers — all areas where Congress has constitutionally granted authority.

Given that pattern, the administration expects lawmakers will craft the Russia sanctions bill in a way that satisfies Trump, even if that means giving up their role administering its provisions. That’s a shift from Trump’s first term, when a broad sanctions bill targeting Russia included language creating a former congressional review process.

Aside from his desire to curtail Congress’ ability to check him on foreign policy matters, Trump’s insistence on flexibility has just as much to do with keeping the door open for a potential breakthrough with Putin, according to the two White House officials.

Graham reiterated Wednesday that he believes Trump is on board with his legislation, saying that the president “wants a waiver, he’s got a waiver. He’s in control of how you implement the sanctions.”

“He told me he thought it would be helpful,” Graham said about his conversations with Trump about the bill. “We want to be a team. We want to help the president. This is an effort to give the president leverage he doesn’t have today.”

Even with the bill’s broad and bipartisan backing in the Senate — with more than 80 co-sponsors, it could theoretically survive a Trump veto — many Republicans are loath to take it up until there’s a clear and unequivocal statement of support from the president.

“The desire to move up here is real, but the risk is moving a bill that the president ultimately decides he doesn’t want,” said one GOP Hill official granted anonymity to discuss the private deliberations.

While Republicans are tentatively eyeing the week of July 21 to put the bill on the floor, some GOP lawmakers have been privately skeptical of Graham’s claims this week that everyone is on the same page. They want to hear Trump say it himself.

That’s particularly true for a handful of lawmakers in the “America First” faction of the GOP who have typically been at odds with Graham’s more traditional hawkish stances. Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), for instance, said he would be calling Trump this week to hear his thoughts on the bill directly.

“I know Lindsey has said now he’s in favor of it … [but] I just want to get clued into what his thinking on it,” Hawley said. “I just prefer to hear it from him.”

Said another GOP senator who was granted anonymity to speak candidly, “If the president’s in favor of sanctions, then I’m in favor of sanctions, but I defer to the president.”

“He’s the one in the middle of all the negotiations,” the senator continued. “He’s frustrated with Putin today. He’s been frustrated with [Ukrainian President Volodymyr] Zelenskyy before. And he’s the only leader in the world that can bring both sides together.”

Connor O’Brien contributed to this report.

Sen. Thom Tillis said he will likely vote to advance the nomination of Emil Bove, President Donald Trump’s former criminal defense attorney and controversial pick for a judgeship on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, in the Senate Judiciary Committee next week.

“I’m probably going to go with the staff recommendation,” the North Carolina Republican told reporters Wednesday afternoon, adding that staff suggested he vote “yes.”

Tillis, who recently announced he would not seek reelection next year, has emerged as a swing vote on the panel: His pledge to vote in committee against Trump’s former nominee for U.S. attorney in District of Columbia, Ed Martin, helped tank the nomination entirely. His openness now to vote in favor of Bove, however, is a strong signal that any challenges this nominee may face on the Senate floor won’t originate on the Judiciary Committee, which is otherwise stacked with staunch Trump loyalists.

Bove, who is currently serving as principal associate deputy attorney general, was alleged by a former Justice Department staffer to have endorsed defying court orders to carry out Trump’s deportation agenda.

His role in DOJ efforts to dismiss corruption charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams, and to fire department staffers who worked on cases tied to the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, have also made his confirmation a flashpoint fight for Democrats, who argue he is unfit for the powerful federal appeals court bench.

President Donald Trump’s pick to run the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is one step closer to confirmation.

On Wednesday, the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee voted to advance the nomination of Susan Monarez, a former agency acting director who has held various health-related roles in the federal government for 20 years.

Monarez advanced along a 12-11 party-line vote.

“She is committed to improving transparency to CDC and properly communicating health guidance to the American people,” said Chair Bill Cassidy (R-La.) “This is especially crucial as the nations combat reemerging public health threats like measles, which has taken three lives in the United States this year — one that’s not included, but is tragic, is the Canadian woman who was pregnant, got exposed to measles and lost her child — and hospitalized many more due to misinformation regarding the measles vaccine.”

Public health experts also say that Monarez is well-qualified to lead the agency — and hope she could become a bulwark against some of HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s vaccine policy changes.

“There’s a delicate dance that she will have to do if she wants to maintain her job,” said Dr. Richard Besser, a former acting director of the CDC and CEO of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. “Understanding how to push back and when to push back will be critical to her success.”

Democrats, nonetheless, pushed back, citing Kennedy. “Dr. Monarez stood by while Secretary Kennedy spread misinformation about vaccines,” said ranking member Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)

ACIP role: In addition to running the CDC, Monarez will also have significant power over vaccine access if the full Senate confirms her.

Last month, Kennedy fired all the members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices — the expert panel that votes on updates to the childhood and adult vaccine schedules — and appointed new members more aligned with his views on vaccination. The panel later voted to stop recommending flu vaccines with thimerosal — a preservative that has for decades been deemed safe by health agencies — to anyone.

But before the panel’s recommendations become official, the CDC director or the HHS secretary must sign off on them.

Key context: Monarez has advanced further in the confirmation process than Dr. Dave Weldon, Trump’s first pick to run the agency. The administration dropped Weldon, a former Florida congressman with a long history of vaccine skepticism, when it became clear he did not have enough votes to advance.

A full Senate vote has yet to be scheduled on the nomination.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune signaled Wednesday the Senate is prepared to pass new sanctions targeting Russia this month, saying he is working with the White House to get the bill to President Donald Trump’s desk.

Speaking from the Senate floor, Thune said that there’s been “substantial progress” on legislation targeting Russia’s energy production and that the bill would “enhance President Trump’s leverage at the negotiating table and help end the bloodshed in Ukraine.”

“I fully expect that could be ready for floor consideration as early as this work period,” Thune said. “Senate Republicans are committed to working with the House and White House to get this legislation through Congress and on to the president’s desk.”

The Senate is set to remain in session through Aug. 1, though the House is set to depart Washington for the long August recess a week earlier.

The sanctions bill has more than 80 supporters, but Thune has been waiting on a clear signal from Trump before moving forward. Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), its coauthors, have built it additional flexibility for Trump as they’ve negotiated the bill, Graham told reporters Tuesday.

Stephanie Murphy, a once-prominent voice for House Democrats’ moderate wing, is running for mayor in Orange County, Florida.

“I was proud to represent parts of Orlando in the House of Representatives, where I was ranked one of America’s most bipartisan and effective members of Congress,” she said in her announcement Wednesday. “But before I was ever in Washington, I worked in business, helping companies grow, solve problems and cut through red tape. Now I want to bring that same approach to local government.”

Murphy made a surprise announcement in 2021 that she would not seek reelection to her Orlando-area House seat. She had ousted Republican John Mica in 2016 from the seat he had served in for 12 terms.

She had helped Democrats develop a strategy to retake the House in 2018, and her retirement sparked concerns from moderate Democrats about the future of the party.

At the time, Murphy told POLITICO she was not ruling out a run for other offices in the future. Her decision to leave, she said, was because serving had been a “personal sacrifice” that was “hard on my family and my kids.”

“I think it’s hard for people in politics and especially in Washington to understand that someone at my age would quote unquote, retire … without having some sort of scandal or without fear of losing a reelection or without immediately running for another position or job,” Murphy said. “But really, right now I need to be with my family.”

In her mayoral announcement, Murphy cited raising her kids in Orange County, saying she had “skin in the game.” Much of her announcement video centered around policies for working families, like safer communities and stronger schools.

Kevin O’Connor, who served as Joe Biden’s physician while the former president was in office, is refusing to testify in a closed-door interview as part of the House GOP probe into Biden’s mental acuity.

O’Connor asserted doctor-patient privilege and his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, according to a statement from his attorneys. He had repeatedly argued his duties as a doctor complicated his testimony and prevented him from sharing some sensitive information. But House Oversight Committee chair James Comer (R-Ky.), who is leading the investigation, has rejected those claims.

“On the advice of his legal counsel, Dr. O’Connor refused to answer questions that invaded the well-established legal privilege that protects confidential matters between physicians and their patients,” the statement read. “His assertion of his right under the Fifth Amendment to decline to answer questions, also on the advice of his lawyers, was made necessary by the unique circumstances of this deposition.

The statement also cited President Donald Trump’s own invocation of his Fifth Amendment right before his deposition with New York State Attorney General Letitia James, quoting Trump’s suggestion that only “an absolute fool” would refuse to take the Fifth.

Despite refusing to answer questions, O’Connor arrived at the Rayburn House office building on Wednesday, following a subpoena issued by the committee last month, compelling his appearance. In recent days, he sought to delay his interview to continue negotiations with the committee.

The Trump White House earlier waived executive privilege for O’Connor in an effort to compel his cooperation.

Comer’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Senate GOP leaders are scrambling to shore up the votes for the White House’s $9.4 billion request to claw back funding for foreign aid and public broadcasting.

It’s dangerously close to the July 18 deadline that will render Trump’s rescissions package expired for good if Congress doesn’t act. But Senate Republicans are seeking tweaks to minimize the bill’s cuts to AIDS prevention efforts around the world and valued local broadcasters back home.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune can lose no more than three GOP senators if he wants to get the White House request across the finish line. According to him, it’s still TBD what the bill will look like when and if it gets through the chamber.

“We’ll see where it goes,” Thune told reporters Tuesday, adding that he doesn’t have a hard vote count yet. Thune is assuming Republicans will at least be able to gather the necessary 51 votes to begin debate on the package while leaders continue to whip support.

Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins (R-Maine) is among the Republicans seeking to amend the package, but she refused to elaborate on how much of the $9.4 billion she is aiming to protect: “I have already made clear I don’t support the cuts to PEPFAR and child and maternal health,” Collins said Tuesday night.

Sens. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) and Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska) on Tuesday both said they want amendments to protect public radio stations for Native American reservations and rural Alaskans, respectively.

“Whatever form it takes, we can’t lose these small-town radio stations across the country that are literally the only way to get out an emergency message,” Rounds told reporters.

Complicating efforts to change the package: Any amendment would have to be narrowly tailored to comply with germaneness rules. The parliamentarian is involved, guiding senators on what tweaks will be allowed.

Should the parliamentarian allow changes, Collins & Co. might find support from other Republicans. Sen. Jerry Moran of Kansas said he’s keeping his options open until he sees what the chamber’s rulekeeper will allow. Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina said he currently “lean[s] yes” on the package but said some Republicans have made persuasive arguments in favor of protecting PEPFAR.

Other Republicans can’t understand their colleagues’ objections.

“After all the tough talk by Republicans in the Senate about the need to reduce spending, if we can’t agree to reduce $9 billion worth of spending porn, then we all ought to go buy paper bags and put them over our heads,” Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) told reporters Tuesday.

What else we’re watching:

Russia sanctions pending: Expect developments later this week from Thune on when the chamber could take up a bipartisan bill to impose new sanctions on Russia. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told reporters the president is on board with a punishing new package as Russian President Vladimir Putin continues to resist peace talks in Ukraine.

Biden doc to testify: Kevin O’Connor, who served as former President Joe Biden’s physician, is testifying before the House Oversight Committee Wednesday as part of its probe into Biden’s mental acuity while in office. The Trump White House waived executive privilege for O’Connor ahead of his interview, meaning he won’t be able to invoke that reason to avoid answering questions.

New megabill talks heat up: Senate Finance Chair Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) joined House GOP leaders in saying that he wants a second reconciliation bill this fall. He believes policies were left on the table from the first package, although declined to disclose specifics. House Budget Chair Jodey Arrington (R-Texas) said he believes GOP leaders should try to revive provisions cut from the first megabill due to the Byrd rule.

Jordain Carney, Jennifer Scholtes and Hailey Fuchs contributed to this report.

As congressional Republicans advanced their megabill in recent months, many fiscal hawks in the party figured they had a powerful force on their side: wary titans of finance who had started sending powerful signals that their appetite for purchasing U.S. debt was not, in fact, endless.

Turns out Wall Street was barely a bump in the road.

In passing the One Big Beautiful Bill Act last week, GOP leaders blew past a host of warnings to potentially add several trillion dollars of additional borrowing — brushing off concerns that they were missing a late opportunity to put the nation on a more sustainable fiscal trajectory in favor of piling on expensive new tax cuts.

The whole episode was a stark display of how short-term rewards and Trump’s demands outweighed any anxieties about long-term calamity — even from a constituency as powerful as Wall Street, whose major players are reliable financiers for politicians of both parties.

Some heavyweights like JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon and billionaire investor Ray Dalio emerged as clarion voices for fiscal rectitude. Many others kept quiet on macroeconomic issues and advocated instead for the extension of tax cuts to promote economic growth — and, frequently, their own personal welfare.

Rather than send a big, beautiful signal to the bond markets that discipline would finally be restored, Republicans appear to have done the opposite: Yields on 10-year Treasuries have crept up around 18 basis points over the past week as market watchers ingested tariff news, but also openly wondered if either party is capable of reigning in the roughly $36 trillion national debt.

“If one of the goals was to calm the bond market down, I wouldn’t take much comfort from the past couple of days,” said economist Ed Yardeni, who coined the term “bond vigilantes” to describe investors who undertook massive selloffs of bonds to protest Fed policies in the 1980s.

“The act is not designed as a deficit reduction act. It’s designed as, ‘Let’s cross our fingers and hope that lower taxes boost economic growth again fast enough to bring in revenues,’” he added.

“Growth” was the word repeatedly invoked by President Donald Trump and his allies on Capitol Hill, who relied on rosy economic projections developed inside the White House to argue that the bill’s tax cuts would essentially pay for themselves.

Outside observers saw an entirely different kind of growth: Independent forecasters — including the nonpartisan in-house scorekeepers at the Congressional Budget Office — predicted the added debt created by the bill would increase federal borrowing costs, swamping any economic gains reaped through the tax cuts.

It’s a version of the “debt spiral” that many fiscal doomsayers have warned the U.S. might be entering after spending decades as the world’s safest investment. Lawmakers heard those calls loud and clear at various points recently.

In May, Moody’s Ratings downgraded Treasuries from their prior top rating, citing “persistent, large fiscal deficits [that] will drive the government’s debt and interest burden higher.” In late March, a group of House Republicans heard directly from Dalio, who urged them in a private briefing to start bringing annual deficits down to 3 percent of GDP. Deficits are currently running more than twice that.

Members were already spooked by the spike in Treasury yields after Trump rolled out his sweeping “Liberation Day” tariffs in April. Dalio told them that an even steeper selloff could occur if they didn’t get the nation’s fiscal house in order. The concern seemed to be confirmed when yields for 20 and 30-year Treasuries closed out above 5 percent the day that the House passed the sweeping legislation. 

Still, the GOP did not end up heeding Dalio’s warning, and last week he said on X that he now expects sizable increases of government debt relative to GDP. That, in turn, would lead to “unimaginable” tax increases or spending cuts — or, perhaps more likely, inflationary money-printing.

He said that “big, painful disruptions will likely occur” if lawmakers can’t bring the deficit down to 3 percent of GDP.

Earlier on, GOP lawmakers on the House Budget Committee Republicans had taken Dalio’s message to heart, and his March briefing was part of what led House Budget Chair Jodey Arrington (R-Texas) and Budget Vice Chair Lloyd Smucker (R-Pa.) to craft a provision in the House bill linking the amount of tax cuts to spending cuts in the domestic policy legislation.

But when the Senate took up the House products, Senate Republicans added hundreds of billions in tax cuts to the legislation while jettisoning north of $200 billion in spending cuts because they didn’t adhere to Senate budget rules. With pressure from the White House, Senate Republicans forced their product down the throats of fiscal hawks in the House.

As a result, the bill ended up missing the mark on the House framework by around $600 billion dollars, according to the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

“The one piece that I wish was stronger coming out of the Senate was the offset provision, the deficit-neutral principle that was hard-wired into our budget resolution,” Arrington said in an interview after the House passed the final legislation.

Arrington, who authored an austere balanced budget he dubbed “Reverse the Curse” before ultimately supporting Trump’s deficit-busting bill, said he was “not sure either party is unilaterally” capable of changing the nation’s fiscal path. He suggested Congress would have to turn to a bipartisan commission, similar to one established in 2010 under former President Barack Obama, to address the issue.

Outsourcing the hard trade-offs necessary for deficit reduction is one thing; mustering the political will to enact them is another. The megabill drama showed that the issue is hard to crack for even the most powerful lobbies, said Andrew Moylan of Arnold Ventures, a think tank endowed by billionaire investor John Arnold that advocated an array of policies to help close the fiscal gaps in the GOP’s megabill.

“I think that it’s going to be difficult for any actor, whether it’s a Wall Street person or a policy organization or grassroots group or whatever, to have an impact on this debate that helps us reduce deficits unless constituents are feeling pain that they feel like Congress needs to help address.”

Some in the House GOP are hoping that they’ll have a chance to enact additional spending cuts in further party-line bills this year as well as through the appropriations process. Many conservatives said they were reassured by 11th-hour conversations they had with White House budget chief Russ Vought before the final vote.

“You’re going to see a lot of fiscal restraint to add to this growth picture,” said Rep. Andy Barr (R-Ky.), a House Financial Services Committee member. “So growth, fiscal restraint — that will ultimately send the virtuous signal to the bond market.”

Barr said he also supports updating leverage requirements for banks to encourage them to purchase more Treasuries, which could help bring yields down.

As for Democrats, Rep. Ro Khanna of California laid out a progressive debt reduction plan in June that would cut the deficit by $12 trillion through reforms to defense contracting, a crackdown on “corporate profiteering” in Medicare and tax hikes for billionaires and companies.

In an interview Monday, Khanna predicted that serious deficit reduction would most likely occur under a Democratic trifecta rather than as part of a bipartisan effort.

Republicans, Khanna said, “have to be willing to raise taxes on the wealthy. That’s a philosophical difference. The math just doesn’t work without raising taxes on the wealthy.”

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) believes he has a commitment from the White House and Senate GOP leadership to get another chance to repeal an expansion of Medicaid offerings — a controversial proposal that failed to make it the final version of President Donald Trump’s sweeping domestic policy package.

“I think I pretty well have a commitment. They’re going to do that,” Johnson told reporters of the prospects that Republicans will reconsider a provision that would end the federal government’s 90 percent cost share of funding for new enrollees in states that expanded Medicaid under the Democrats’ 2010 health care law.

Johnson added that he ended up voting for Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” largely because he was given assurances of the proposed cuts, despite his significant concerns about the deficit projections under the bill.

“Another reason why I definitely had to vote ‘yes,’ I would have just dealt myself out of being involved in that process. And I wanted to be highly involved in that process,” said Johnson of the potential to include the Medicaid expansion cost-sharing cuts in a second party-line bill later this year. “That’s where I gained a fair amount of confidence from the White House, the President, our leadership, that we will have a second bite of the apple.”

The proposal to roll back the Affordable Care Act Medicaid expansion was floated by Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) as an amendment to the GOP megabill. That amendment, which was co-sponsored by Senate Finance Chair Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), would have ended the 90 percent federal cost-share at the end of 2030. Afterwards, new enrollees would have seen their medical costs reimbursed by the federal government at rates as low as 50 percent.

Johnson, Crapo, Scott and other proponents of the amendment argued that states have gamed the system by leveraging artificial increases in Medicaid spending to draw in more federal funding. And according to estimates, the policy change would have cut spending by $313 billion — putting a major dent in the package’s overall price tag over which fiscal hawks fretted. The amendment never received a vote, however, amid fierce opposition from several moderates.

Despite Johnson’s insistence he has a promise on pursuing this proposal in the coming months, nothing is set in stone. Senior Republicans on Capitol Hill and in the White House, meanwhile, continue to deny they made any side deals as a condition of winning over holdouts.

Scott said also in a brief interview Tuesday he had not been given any commitment from the White House to include his proposal in a second or third budget reconciliation package, adding that those conversations are “just starting.”

A spokesperson for Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Mia McCarthy contributed to this report.

Senate Republicans are eyeing changes to the White House’s $9.4 billion request to claw back funding for foreign aid and public broadcasting as leadership plans to bring it to the floor next week.

Majority Leader John Thune can only lose three GOP senators and still get the House-passed bill to the floor and ultimately across the finish line — and the South Dakota Republican is openly acknowledging that it’s TBD what the bill looks like when and if it gets there.

That’s because Republican senators are still talking about potential tweaks to slim down the cuts President Donald Trump is seeking for global health programs and AIDS prevention efforts around the world, as well as local radio stations and public TV programming valued back home.

Senate GOP leaders have little time to spare: By the end of the day on July 18, the request Trump sent to Capitol Hill last month will expire, meaning the administration will be forced to spend the money as lawmakers originally intended if Congress doesn’t act.

Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins of Maine, as well as South Dakota Sen. Mike Rounds, are among the Senate Republicans exploring the idea of amending the package to protect funding for public broadcasting, along with programs to stop the spread of AIDS.

“Whatever form it takes, we can’t lose these small-town radio stations across the country that are literally the only way to get out an emergency message,” Rounds told reporters Tuesday night.

Rounds noted, however, that White House budget director Russ Vought committed to working to protect funding for public radio stations if Congress clears the package clawing back a total of $1.1 billion from public broadcasting.

Alaska Republican Sens. Dan Sullivan and Lisa Murkowski have also signaled that they want changes to the bill. Sullivan said Tuesday that he’s still seeking votes on amendments to the package but didn’t detail what those might entail.

Collins already said weeks ago that she would seek changes to the package, but she also is declining to elaborate on how much funding she is aiming to protect.

“I have already made clear I don’t support the cuts to PEPFAR and child and maternal health,” Collins said in a brief interview Tuesday night.

Further complicating any attempt to make changes to a rescissions package in a narrowly divided Republican Senate, any amendments to the president’s request to nix funding would have to be narrowly tailored to comply with chamber rules. So senators are now seeking guidance from the Senate parliamentarian on what tweaks would be allowed.

“I’m trying now to determine what amendments I might be able to vote for,” Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kansas) said in a brief interview Tuesday night. “So until I know the scope of the capabilities, I’d rather be in a position of keeping my options open.”

Senate Republicans are also banking on House Republicans swallowing any changes they make to the rescissions package — similar to their strategy on Trump’s megabill — after the lawmakers across the Capitol narrowly passed the president’s clawbacks request last month without changes.

“We’ll see where it goes,” Thune told reporters Tuesday, adding that while he hasn’t done a hard vote count yet he is assuming Republicans will at least be able to get it onto the Senate floor.

Asked if he was worried about Collins or other moderates voting against the bill, Thune demurred, suggesting those conversations were still to come.

“We’ll have a lot of conversations about it, and we’ll get a better sense of where our members are,” Thune said.

Some Republican senators who generally back the package also support attempts to amend it.

“Right now, I’m lean yes,” Sen. Thom Tillis said Tuesday night about passage of the package.

But the retiring North Carolina senator said some of his Republican colleagues have also made persuasive arguments in favor of protecting money for PEPFAR, the global AIDS reduction campaign Trump is seeking to slash by $400 million.

“I’m open to it, if it makes the rescission better,” Tillis said of amending the package.

If Congress rejects the package or doesn’t clear it through both chambers by the July 18 deadline, Trump would be forced to spend the money and prevented from requesting the same cuts again.

But if the package passes, the White House will finally be able to send back to the Treasury a small slice of the billions of dollars in proposed funding cuts made in recent months. That includes reductions Elon Musk dictated as head of the Department of Government Efficiency before leaving his Trump administration role.

White House allies are also predicting a political blowup from Trump if the Senate falls short. Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) said that if the bill fails, the White House “will go nuts” and that it would be an “embarrassment to the president.”

“I think if the Republicans in the United States Senate do not pass the rescission package, after all the rhetoric about reducing spending, then they should hide their head in the bag, and I think the White House will provide the bag,” Kennedy added.

In 2018, Senate Republicans, who had a slightly narrower majority, rejected an effort during the first Trump administration to revoke congressionally approved spending. Trump officials say they tailored their latest request to make it as politically palatable as possible, but they’ve also flirted with leapfrogging Congress and trying to rescind funding on their own if the Senate falls short.

Cassandra Dumay, Mia McCarthy and Calen Razor contributed to this report.