Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and congressional Republicans will meet to sketch out the plan for passing a multi-trillion tax cut in the coming weeks as polling shows that voters largely disapprove of the White House’s handling of the economy.

Bessent and National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett will meet with top congressional leaders Monday afternoon as lawmakers return from a two-week break. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, House Speaker Mike Johnson and the two tax committee chairmen Senator Mike Crapo and Representative Jason Smith are slated to attend, according to people familiar with the schedule.

President Donald Trump and Johnson will also meet earlier in the afternoon.

Trump has put increasing pressure on Republicans to pass the measure, going so far as to tell Michigan’s Republican lawmakers to stay in Washington rather than join him for a speech today in the state marking his first 100 days in office.

The series of meetings between the administration and lawmakers comes as pressure is mounting on House Republicans to pass a tax bill. Johnson has set an end-of-May goal to pass legislation that includes a renewal of Trump’s first-term cuts and a fresh round of levy reductions, partially paid for by curbing federal spending.

The Senate isn’t likely to complete work on the measure for months, with party leaders in that chamber setting their sights on a vote by August.

The push on taxes follows a series of polls that show that Americans are souring on the president’s handling of pocketbook issues. A CNN poll released Sunday showed that just 39% of Americans approve of how Trump has steered the economy, the lowest of his two terms in the White House. An NBC News poll showed tariffs were also deeply unpopular.

Earlier this month, Republicans passed a budget resolution that will allow them to fast-track the tax bill through Congress without needing to make any concessions to attract Democratic votes.

Republicans have already put forward some of the easier pieces of the eventual package, including a $150 billion boost to defense and new cuts to federal worker pensions. But GOP lawmakers have yet to make significant progress on the specifics of the legislation, including which tax priorities to include and which health care spending to cut.

Hassett told Fox Business last week that he and Bessent will present a “list of the president’s top priorities to make sure they make it into the bill” during Monday’s meeting.

Earlier Monday, Bessent touted some campaign proposals from Trump specifically calling out “no tax on tips, no tax on Social Security, no tax on overtime and making auto loans deductible.”