Republicans On Verge Of Betraying Voters By Keeping Biden’s Green New Deal In Trump’s Budget Bill

A group of House Republicans is demanding the full repeal of Biden’s green energy subsidies as part of a major bill advancing Trump’s America First agenda. The GOP is now facing internal conflict over whether to keep parts of the Inflation Reduction Act intact.

Key Facts:

  • Thirty-eight House Republicans sent a letter to Ways & Means Chairman Jason Smith demanding a full repeal of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).
  • The IRA includes $1 trillion in green energy subsidies over the next decade, which critics say inflate energy costs and harm grid reliability.
  • Some Republicans are defending portions of the IRA, citing job creation and prior investment commitments.
  • House Republicans are preparing a budget reconciliation bill to advance Trump’s policies on taxes, border security, and energy.
  • The reconciliation process allows the bill to pass the Senate with a simple majority, bypassing Democrat resistance.

The Rest of The Story:

House Republicans are divided over how to handle Biden-era green energy tax credits while preparing a massive budget reconciliation bill to implement Trump’s America First agenda.

While the reconciliation process allows GOP leaders to pass key legislation with a simple majority, internal disagreements over the future of the IRA subsidies have created friction.

One faction of the GOP—made up of 38 lawmakers—has called for a clean repeal of all eight green subsidies in the IRA.

They argue these credits hurt taxpayers, raise energy prices, and undermine energy reliability by propping up wind, solar, and other “unreliable” sources over coal and natural gas.

On the other hand, 21 House Republicans have defended keeping some credits, noting the billions already invested by American companies under the assumption the subsidies would remain for 10 years.

The debate puts House GOP leaders in a difficult position.

Speaker Mike Johnson and others recognize the political risk of pulling subsidies that have brought investments into Republican districts.

But conservative fiscal hawks argue leaving even one of the credits intact undercuts the party’s principles and campaign promises.

Commentary:

This kind of betrayal is exactly why the Republican Party continues to lose the trust of its base.

Republicans were elected to dismantle Biden’s green energy schemes, not to preserve them under the guise of political pragmatism.

The Inflation Reduction Act represents everything wrong with big government—massive handouts, market distortion, and virtue-signaling climate policies at the expense of real energy independence.

The fact that any Republican is now defending these subsidies is shameful. It shows just how deep the establishment rot goes.

If these so-called Republicans can’t bring themselves to fully repeal the IRA, then they’re not serious about putting America first.

They’re just another arm of the D.C. status quo—playing politics while families struggle with energy costs and our electric grid grows weaker.

They say it’s about protecting investments. No.

It’s about protecting votes and campaign dollars.

If projects were based on sound economics, they wouldn’t need government support.

The entire green agenda is a scam that uses taxpayer money to enrich elite investors and foreign manufacturers—mainly China—while kneecapping traditional American energy.

Let’s be clear: There are 80 million Americans who back Trump’s vision, not 80 million Republicans.

The base wants action, not compromise.

If GOP lawmakers continue to put special interests ahead of the promises they made, they can expect to be primaried and replaced.

This should’ve been a no-brainer. Rip out every last subsidy from the IRA. Stand with American energy workers. Cut the red tape.

Instead, we’re watching Republicans twist themselves into knots to keep pieces of Biden’s green disaster alive.

The Bottom Line:

Republicans promised to repeal Biden’s green energy subsidies, but many are now walking that back.

While some lawmakers push for a clean repeal, others are defending credits that benefit their districts.

This internal conflict exposes a bigger issue: the GOP risks alienating its base if it fails to deliver on its America First promises.

The time for excuses is over—voters are watching.

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