Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) used the no-tax-on-tip scam to show why the Big Beautiful Bill is but a deal with the devil, where taxes are increased on the aggregate of the working class.
AOC did not mince her words.
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Summary
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez blasted the “Big Beautiful Bill” as a “deal with the devil,” warning that it robs working families of health care and dignity to bankroll billionaires’ tax cuts. In a fiery floor speech, she decried a tip-tax gimmick, exposed the bill’s $793 billion Medicaid squeeze, and reminded Americans that 17 million people stand to lose coverage.
- Seismic coverage losses: Independent estimates indicate that the bill would push roughly 17 million people off insurance rolls, primarily by hollowing out Medicaid and ACA subsidies.
- $793 billion Medicaid axe: CBO-based analysis projects a decade-long federal Medicaid cut that shifts massive costs to states and safety-net hospitals.
- “No-tax-on-tips” ruse: A temporary deduction capped at $25,000 dazzles tipped workers while larger tax hikes hit everyone earning under $50,000.
- Billionaire bonanza: Simultaneous corporate giveaways—especially to defense contractors and space-tech moguls—balloon the deficit while claiming fiscal discipline.
- Rising grassroots backlash: Progressives vow to mobilize labor, service-sector, and rural voters who would shoulder higher costs and reduced care.
Ocasio-Cortez’s speech crystallizes a simple truth: the bill weaponizes austerity against workers to subsidize the ultra-rich, and voters across the spectrum are noticing.
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Donald Trump’s self-styled “Big Beautiful Bill” embodies a decades-long conservative project: shrink government for the many so that government can lavish treasure upon the few. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez laid that reality bare in her July 2 floor address, deploying both moral clarity and working-class experience to puncture the bill’s marketing myths. Her opening salvo—“it doesn’t take a smart person to know when you’re being lied to”—captured the everyday skepticism of servers, drivers, and warehouse workers who already feel Washington’s indifference.
A Policy of Manufactured Scarcity
At the center of the proposal lies a $793 billion federal Medicaid cut over ten years. Analysts at the Kaiser Family Foundation, parsing the latest CBO tables, outline how work requirements, red tape renewals, and federal funding caps will reduce enrollment by up to 10.3 million people and force states to either absorb costs or drop coverage altogether. Conservatives sold these provisions as “efficiency,” but in practice, they weaponize paperwork to ration care. Meanwhile, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities warns that the broader package will drive total uninsured counts to 17 million by 2034, eclipsing the deepest coverage losses since the passage of the Affordable Care Act.
The Tip-Tax Sleight of Hand
Republicans tout a so-called “no-tax-on-tips” deduction, but the Senate version caps benefits at $25,000—far above the annual tips of an average restaurant server. CBS News documents how many tipped workers will still pay more overall because the bill repeals inflation adjustments for the Earned Income Tax Credit and phases out ACA premium supports. Ocasio-Cortez, who once waited tables, skewered the gimmick as a “shiny object” masking a broader tax hike on households earning under $50,000.
Subsidizing the Oligarchy
While austerity descends on children’s health clinics and rural hospitals, the legislation turbocharges corporate welfare. A Joint Economic Committee minority brief shows hundreds of billions in fresh deductions for accelerated depreciation, defense procurement sweeteners, and a special carve-out for space-launch firms—Elon Musk chief among them. Progressives rightly label this a reverse Robin Hood scheme: it siphons public resources upward, then justifies fresh assaults on the social safety net when deficits spike.
A Broader Democratic Failure—And Opportunity
Ocasio-Cortez’s critique implicitly rebukes centrist Democrats who still triangulate around Republican talking points. Recall Senator Mark Warner’s awkward Meet the Press defense of tip-tax semantics; his hesitation ceded narrative ground. By contrast, AOC deploys popular language—“losing diapers, losing SNAP, losing hospital beds”—that resonates beyond the left flank and reaches pockets of the MAGA base already wary of corporate power. Her model illustrates how moral persuasion, data fluency, and digital savvy can align.
Political Stakes
The bill squeaked through preliminary House votes on party lines, but GOP leaders lack a safe margin. The Guardian’s live blog noted Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries’s call for “John McCain-level courage” among Republicans. Progressive organizers are now pressuring swing-district members, framing the upcoming midterms as a referendum on healthcare security versus plutocratic excess. Early polls from Vox show that Medicaid approval is at historic highs and that a majority opposes benefit cuts
Conclusion
The “Big Beautiful Bill” is not merely flawed; it is structurally cruel. It guts the very programs that shield working-class Americans from medical bankruptcy, hunger, and pandemic aftershocks, all while bestowing record largesse on those hoarding wealth. Ocasio-Cortez’s uncompromising indictment offers a rallying cry: Congress must reject austerity masquerading as reform, and voters must punish those who sign this devil’s contract. Progressives argue that a society’s greatness lies not in gilded launchpads but in guaranteeing that no child loses access to a ventilator because a billionaire wants another tax break. Passing the bill would confirm plutocracy; defeating it would affirm democracy’s promise.
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