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Today’s Agenda

It’s a Quarter After One

Full transparency: It’s kind of hard to write a newsletter about a bill that keeps changing! I’ll do my best, but just to give you an idea of what we’re working with, the House Budget Committee needed to break up their 3,976-page report on the 1,116-page Big Beautiful Bill into nine separate documents because of “file size limitations.” My Chrome tabs are buckling under the pressure:

It’s obvious by now that nothing about this bill is normal. To say it’s merely a “tax cut” is like calling the Titanic a boat. The legislation covers virtually every corner of life: There’s stuff on health care, nutrition, shipbuilding, missile defense, restaurant tips, golden domes … it’s a minefield of policies, which might be why Republicans are having a hard time cobbling together support for it.

The Committee on Rules met Wednesday at 1 a.m. EST for an emergency meeting, and judging by the photos on Getty Images, it was a rough night for many an elected official. And the daylight hours were no better: The White House continued to breathe down the necks of Republican lawmakers, telling them failing to pass President Donald Trump’s signature tax bill before Memorial Day would be the “ultimate betrayal.”

But Kathryn Anne Edwards is pretty sure Americans will be the ones feeling betrayed if Republicans proceed to cut the two largest programs that help low-income families the most: Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. Kathryn calls the tax bill “a relic of a bygone economic era” in which economists felt that giving money to low-wage workers was wasteful and inefficient. Now, thanks to empirical research, we know the opposite is true.

“Research released just this month, for example, uses the variation in timing of state Medicaid expansion to show how effective the coverage is: It reduces mortality by 21% for new enrollees, at a cost well below what they would contribute to the economy,” she writes. “SNAP also has huge economic returns, if for no other reason that it gets money into the hands of people who are quick to spend it. The Department of Agriculture estimates that during a recession, every $1 billion spent on the program increases GDP by $1.5 billion.”

As it currently stands, Justin Fox says the bill “delivers no deficit reduction and adds huge amounts of hassle for poorer Americans.” But perhaps one part of the bill — a decree that would require Medicaid recipients to put in at least 80 hours a month of work, community service, training or education — is worth pursuing, writes the Bloomberg editorial board. In theory, a work requirement could save the US $280 billion over a decade, but such a mandate would be, in the editors words, “devilishly complex to administer.”

But other cuts have Ron Brownstein scratching his head: “The House Republican drive to revoke federal tax incentives for clean energy is testing one of the most durable rules of Congressional behavior: don’t vote against the economic interests of your own district.” Despite lackluster political support, red states got a ton of jobs out of President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act:

Then there’s the elephant in the room, says Allison Schrager. For all the talk of Trump’s Big, Beautiful Bill delivering a debt bomb, she says it’s retirement we should be worrying about. “The biggest source of America’s long-term debt problem, which is not even included in the 10-year budget projections, is unfunded entitlements, largely Social Security and Medicare,” she writes. The fact that neither party is willing to touch retirement savings with a 10-foot poll doesn’t bode well for the future of this nation.

I’d say our lawmakers should sleep on all of that, but given House Speaker Mike Johnson’s “aggressive” timetable and the text Representative Ralph Norman sent Axios today — “THINGS ARE NOT LOOKING GOOD!!” — I don’t think they’ll be getting a lot of shuteye tonight.

Robotaxi When?

Elsewhere in self-imposed deadlines: Elon Musk has vaguely promised that his robotaxi service in Austin will launch “by the end of June.” Knowing him, it’ll be June 30th at 11:59 p.m.

Liam Denning says the Tesla CEO has no wiggle room on his due date, since he already botched the robotaxi unveiling in October, which was initially scheduled for August but had to be pushed back because, well, this is Elon Musk we’re talking about.

“Musk has spoken of launching 10-20 vehicles, initially. Who they carry, and when, where and how they do so, are all important variables,” Liam writes, who says Tesla’s lofty valuation hinges on a successful rollout. You’d think such high stakes would mean the Tesla chief is hard at work trying to get a slot on Kim Kardashian’s calendar, but no: Musk spent Wednesday in Washington listening to Trump spread genocidal conspiracy theories during a meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa.

What happened to taking a step back from politics! As Liam says, “Musk’s politicking has turned Tesla showrooms and chargers into targets for his opponents, and robotaxis may also be in the crosshairs.” We’ll find out in June, I guess?

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Sinners, Sinners Everywhere

If you are one of the five remaining humans who has yet to see Sinners in theaters, the upcoming long weekend is the perfect time to catch Ryan Coogler’s smash hit. This is not an advertisement — although if some higher-up at AMC wants to make me an A-List Stubs member, that’d be sweet — it’s merely what everyone who has seen Sinners will tell you. Michael B. Jordan’s Parent Trap-esque performance really is that good, hence why it’s raked in over $300 million at the box office already.

The milestone “is a major one for any movie, but especially for an R-rated, adult-oriented original — anything that’s not a sequel, prequel, reboot or adaptation of previously known and beloved intellectual property,” writes Jason Bailey. But: Vampires!!! Blood!!! Blues!!! There’s something for everyone to enjoy.

And once you see Sinners, there’s no escaping it. It’s on your timeline. It’s in the family group chat. It’s the first video your TikTok algorithm feeds you. That type of organic, word-of-mouth buzz is the stuff that marketing gurus dream of. “It’s hard to overstate how much this is not par for the course in our age of seemingly disposable entertainment,” says Jason. Read — and watch!!! — the whole thing.

Telltale Charts

Although a lot of Americans — including Tom Cruise — are still willing to splurge on popcorn at the movies, they might not be for long: John Authers calls the latest results of the University of Michigan’s long-running survey on inflation expectations “flabbergasting.” Average consumers in the US expect to see double-digit inflation in the next 12 months, a fact that should send chills down the spines of Walmart execs: “Americans have the power to abandon retailers, food manufacturers and even high-end boutiques that engage in ‘greedflation,’ just as they did in the wake of the pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine,” writes Andrea Flested. German discount stores Aldi and Lidl could easily lure Walmart’s customers away.

While you weren’t paying attention, China took a time machine all the way back to 2003, and not in a cool, vibey retro way. Back then, David Fickling says the economy was barely larger than Italy’s, the lights were flickering because of power shortages and everyone and their mother was afraid of contracting SARS (Covid-19’s ugly older cousin). “The China of 2025 is oddly reminiscent,” he writes: “With a four-year real estate crash showing few signs of abating, construction of new housing is now back to the levels of the early 2000s … that degree of slowdown suggests we may still be underplaying the scale of this reversal as a shift in economic activity — and, importantly, the carbon emissions that result from it.”

Further Reading

America’s bond auction gone wrong underscores concern about rising debt and deficits in the US. — Robert Burgess

We’ve seen FEMA unprepared before. Let’s not risk another Hurricane Katrina. — Mark Gongloff

Europe can deter Putin by reviving the “Reforger,” a massive Cold War military exercise. — James Stavridis

Instead of revisiting the “demon gate” debate in Japan, policymakers should find fresh ideas. — Gearoid Reidy

The Fed should listen to Ben Bernanke and publish quarterly monetary policy reports. — Bill Dudley

Sometimes, Trump has good instincts. Too bad that doesn’t translate into good statecraft. — Andreas Kluth

Thames Water’s executive bonuses were almost a joke. — Matthew Brooker

Inflation and weak growth are a bad mix for anyone, but especially for banks. — Paul J. Davies

ICYMI

The Pentagon has possession of Qatar’s luxury plane.

OpenAI’s Sam Altman teams up with Apple veteran Jony Ive.

How Vladimir Putin turned Brazil into a spy factory.

CVS offers bonuses and pizza parties to boost vaccine sales.

Kickers

Jane Goodall on Call Her Daddy. [1]

TikTok is not falling for propaganda.

Carnegie Hall is suing Carnegie Diner.

You could own this house in Ireland for $7.

‘Tis the season for potatoes.

Notes: Please send funeral potato salad and feedback to Jessica Karl at jkarl9@bloomberg.net.

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