r/politics • u/PoliticsModeratorBot 🤖 Bot • 1d ago
Discussion Discussion Thread: US Senate Debates and Considers the Republican Budget Resolution on April 4th, 2025
News and Analysis
CBS: Senate Republicans unveil budget resolution key to unlocking Trump agenda (Published two days ago)
NBC: GOP concerns about tax cut strategy and Medicaid loom over Senate budget
ABC: Video: Senate Republicans set to push Trump agenda forward with vote-a-rama
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget: Senate Budget Could Enable Unprecedented Deficit Increase
Live Updates
Relevant text-based, live update pages are being maintained by the following outlets: NBC, and Politico (soft paywall).
Where to Watch
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u/OnDrugsTonight United Kingdom 1d ago
I'd say the re-establishment of economic ties and removal of tariffs could happen pretty much instantaneously. Hell, nobody wanted this trade war in the first place, so we're all standing by for the US to snap out of it.
Other damages may be a lot harder to repair. America's loss of soft power through the abolishment of USAID means that by 2028 other players (mainly China) will have filled the vacuum left behind by America's withdrawal from the world stage, and countries around the globe will have entered into comfortable long term economic partnerships with China that they will be reluctant (or unable) to abandon.
Same with NATO. While it'd be good to temporarily have some sanity back in the White House, we'd be crazy to trust America again in the same way we did before. "Fool me once" etc. Knowing that every four years it'll be a roll of a dice whether or not we're still allies doesn't lend itself well to making strategic military decisions that are measured in decades. So the European side of NATO will probably be a lot more inward looking than it was before.
All of this obviously hinges on the rather optimistic assumption that you guys will still have meaningful, democratic elections in 2028.