They got started five seconds late, but members of the House of Representatives were hard at work Thursday by 9:00:05 East Coast time.

And the “work” they were doing is called H.R. 1, sponsored by Texas Republican Kevin Brady and known as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

Five hours later, they were done: the bill passed its sweeping rewrite of the tax code and it was on to the Senate which is expected to vote on their version next wek.

As the New York Times pointed out, the tax overhaul still faces significant challenges, since Republicans must align the House legislation with a very different bill working its way through the Senate Finance Committee this week.

Still, all morning GOP leaders exuded confidence that they had the votes they needed, even as President Trump dropped by to urge them to move it along. Related Articles A look at the tax bill the House is voting on today

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And here in the Golden State, all eyes were on the California GOP delegation to see how its members would vote, even as they’re being targeted by an ad campaign that highlights changes in the proposed bill that would hurt many of their state’s taxpayers.

Here’s a quick look at what went down:

When was the vote?

The vote on H.R. 1 came just before 11 a.m. Pacific Time.

What was the count?

227 to 205

In addition to every Democrat, 13 Republicans voted against the bill.

What’s in the bill?

The package represents a sweeping redo of the tax code, giving Republicans a huge push as they seek to enact $1.5 trillion in tax cuts for businesses and individuals and deliver the first major legislative achievement of President Trump’s tenure.

So California’s GOP lawmakers were being pressured before the vote?

Five of the state’s GOP members were the targets of TV ads which say the tax reform bill as written would disproportionately impact Californians and residents of other high-tax states such as New York and New Jersey. GOP lawmakers in those states were being pressured even more than California’s delegation because their states’ taxpayers would be hurt by the new bill even more than those in the Golden State.

“The Republican tax plan will raise taxes on California families by eliminating middle-class tax deductions to pay for a massive tax break for the super wealthy and big corporations,” says a narrator in the ad sponsored by a coalition of liberal and labor groups. “Tell your member of Congress to vote ‘no’ on the Republican tax plan. California families can’t afford it.”

And they were also being pressured by their own party?

As the LA Times reported, ads went up Monday that put the heat on GOP lawmakers, pressuring them to tow the party line and vote for the bill today. Sponsored by two conservative PACs associated with House Speaker Paul Ryan, the $1.5 million in TV and online ads target 23 Republicans in California, Illinois, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania.

Which Californian Republicans took most of the heat?

The California members targeted in these ads are Reps. Jeff Denham of Turlock, David Valadao of Hanford, Steve Knight of Palmdale, Mimi Walters of Irvine and Darrell Issa of Vista.

So how did they all vote on Thursday?

Eleven California Republicans supported the bill, but no votes came from Issa, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher and Rep. Tom McClintock.