- South Korea rival parties form plane crash task force
- Georgians hold anti-government protest on Orthodox Christmas
- Japan actor fired from beer ad after drunken escapade
- Nvidia ramps up AI tech for games, robots and autos
- Blinken says US-Japan ties solid despite rift over steel deal
- Quake in China's Tibet kills 95 with tremors felt in Nepal, India
- Taiwan says Chinese-owned ship suspected of damaging sea cable goes dark
- North Korea's Kim says new hypersonic missile will deter 'rivals'
- Sinner turns focus to Australian Open defence after 'amazing' year
- Ostapenko begins Adelaide title defence with comeback win
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- Pace of German emissions cuts slows in 2024: study
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- Giannis triple-double propels Bucks over Raptors
- S. Korea rival parties form plane crash task force despite political turmoil
- Quake in China's Tibet kills 53 with tremors felt in Nepal, India
- Olmo situation overshadowing Barca bid for Spanish Super Cup
- Winter storm leaves large US region blanketed in snow, ice
- Hewitt's son Cruz out of Australian Open qualifying at first hurdle
- Quake in China's Tibet kills 32 with tremors felt in Nepal, India
- Blinken says US-Japan ties rock solid despite rift over steel deal
- Osaka splits with rapper Cordae ahead of Australian Open
- Sabalenka to Andreeva: Five women to watch at the Australian Open
- Sabalenka eyes Australian Open hat-trick but Swiatek, Gauff lurk
- Asian markets mostly rise after tech-fuelled Wall St rally
- Blinken in Japan after rift on steel deal
- Ex-England skipper Vaughan backs shake-up 'to keep Test cricket relevant'
- S. Korea investigators seek new warrant to arrest President Yoon
- North Korea's Kim says new missile will deter 'rivals'
- France to remember Charlie Hebdo attacks 10 years on
- 'Comeback' queen Demi Moore 'has always been here,' says director
- Homes talk and tables walk at AI dominated CES
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- Golden Globes ratings edge up past 10 million
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- Tensions mount in Venezuela ahead of Maduro swearing-in
- Judge rejects Trump request to delay hush money sentencing
- US, European markets mostly rise as Trump tariff plans in question
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- Venezuela on tenterhooks ahead of Maduro swearing-in
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- US Steel and Nippon Steel sue over Biden's decision to block merger
- Packers receiver Watson ruled out of playoffs
- Harris gracious in defeat as Congress certifies Trump's election
- Canada's Trudeau: Liberal star who dazzled then fizzled
Top US Republican eyes swift passage of Trump priority mega-bill
The speaker of the US House said Sunday he was pushing an "aggressive" timeframe for getting a multi-trillion-dollar bill addressing immigration, tax cuts and more to Donald Trump's desk by April, within his first 100 days in office.
Speaker Mike Johnson and fellow congressional Republicans are eager to help the incoming president enact his campaign promises, including unprecedented border security spending, business deregulation, boosting energy production and raising the US debt ceiling.
But with a new razor-thin majority in the House of Representatives and similarly tight Senate margins, Democratic opposition could stymie the efforts.
Johnson said he has strategized with Trump about combining several priorities into one gigantic piece of legislation that could move through Congress under rules of so-called reconciliation.
Such a tool allows budget-related bills to clear the 100-member Senate with a simple majority, rather than a typical 60-vote threshold.
"We can put it all together, one big up-or-down vote, which can save the country, quite literally, because there are so many elements to it," Johnson told Fox News.
"That's why we're going to be so aggressive about getting this through in the first 100 days," he said.
Johnson said he aimed to have an initial House vote on the bill as early as April 3. He envisioned it then clearing the Senate and being signed into law by month's end.
According to Johnson, the bill would include funding for securing the US-Mexico border and deporting undocumented immigrants.
Trump focused much of his 2024 presidential campaign on immigration and, after his victory in November, said he could use the military to deport millions of people.
Johnson also said the mega-bill would "restore American energy dominance," extend tax cuts enacted during Trump's first term, and slash red tape "that has smothered our free market."
He also pledged to include a provision extending US borrowing authority.
The United States routinely runs up against a legal constraint on paying for bills already incurred, and Congress is called upon to either formally raise the debt ceiling or suspend it.
A suspension of the debt limit reached by lawmakers in 2023 ended this month, and the country could bump up against the ceiling by June.
During December budget negotiations in Congress, Trump insisted the debt ceiling be raised or even eliminated altogether, but he was unsuccessful.
Johnson on Fox defended the apparent paradox of wanting to increase the limit on government borrowing while boasting of seeking to reduce the deficit.
"We're the team that wants to cut spending," he said. "But you have to raise the debt limit on paper so that we don't frighten the bond markets and the world's economy."
O.Gutierrez--AT