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Parliamentarian Facing Key Rulings on Reconciliation Bill
David Super
Among the most
important decisions concerning the massive budget reconciliation bill pending
in the Senate will be made far outside the glare of public attention.Some time in the next week or so, a handful
of Senate staff from each party will meet with Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth
MacDonough for a peculiar ritual known as a “Byrd Bath.”Almost certainly, no senators will be
present.The result of these few hours
of conversation will have a profound effect on the future of U.S. social
policy.
The budget
reconciliation procedures Republicans are relying upon to move President Trump’s
“One Big Beautiful Bill” provide one of the rare opportunities to circumvent
the filibuster, which otherwise requires some bipartisan support for
legislation to move.Half a century ago,
the Senate agreed to this deviation from its traditions of forced compromise to
allow important fiscal legislation to move relatively unobstructed.Senators were clear, however, that they did
not want budget reconciliation’s reach to spread to allow narrow majorities to
impose their will on primarily non-fiscal matters.The Byrd
Rule reflects that sentiment, blocking provisions that disregard Congress’s
fiscal planning process, those with no clear fiscal impact, and any other if “it
produces changes in outlays or revenues which are merely incidental to the
non-budgetary components of the provision”.Any such provisions may move in a reconciliation bill only if sixty
senators – the same number required to end a filibuster – vote to waive the
point of order.
Previously the
parliamentarian rejected Republican attempts to defund Planned Parenthood via reconciliation,
ruling that anti-abortion fervor was driving the provision and any modest
savings were “merely incidental” in its sponsors’ eyes.Similarly, she prevented Democrats from
increasing the minimum wage on reconciliation – an action that would have quite
large impacts on taxes and benefit programs – because she judged that those
effects were “merely incidental” to sponsors’ desire to transfer money from
employers to low-wage workers.Most
controversially, in 2021 she rejected several proposals to give immigrants a
path to citizenship – an initiative difficult to accomplish on regular
legislation because of its large fiscal cost – because she saw changes in
immigration regulation as its sponsors’ key motivation. I disagree with some of her interpretations of
the Congressional Budget Act but have defended
the consistency with which she applies those interpretations.
The House-passed
reconciliation bill is well-stocked with “Byrd bait”.Some provisions will not take the Parliamentarian
long.The House did drop its effort
to radically rewrite Administrative Law by hobbling regulatory agencies as it was obviously pursuing a regulatory agenda, not a fiscal one.On the other hand, it kept section
70302 of the House bill (and section 203 of the Senate Judiciary Committee’s
proposal) whose effect is to excuse the Trump Administration’s contempt of court orders , not at all plausibly a fiscal purpose. And
section 70300 of the House bill (section 301 from the Senate Judiciary
Committee) seeks to block certain settlements of suits against those causing
environmental harm, not to change fiscal policy.
Others likely will
entail a longer discussion.Section
44111 would reduce federal matching payments for federal Medicaid coverage to
states that separately spend their ownfunds providing
comprehensive care to classes of immigrants not eligible for federal coverage.If those states do not stop spending their
own funds on immigrant health care, the bill would sharply reduce the federal
matching rate for those states to implement the Affordable Care Act’s Medicaid
expansion.This raises a host of
constitutional questions: among other
things, it is very much “a gun to the head” of the kind the Supreme Court held
unconstitutional in NFIB v. Sebeliuswith respect to this same Medicaid expansion.
The Byrd Rule,
however, does not bar unconstitutional provisions, only ones with primarily non-fiscal
motivations.(It is more than passing
strange that it requires only fifty-one votes to override a point of order for violating
the Constitution but sixty votes to breach a committee’s 302(a)
allocation.)
Yet this provision’s
fiscal effects, although substantial, also appear “merely incidental” to its
non-fiscal effects in much the same way that the minimum wage and the path to
citizenship were.All three provisions
would have had large positive or negative effects on the federal fisc, but all
three are motivated by something other than federal fiscal policy:federal regulatory policy (the minimum wage
and the path to citizenship) or state fiscal policy (the pending provision on
state-funded immigrant health care).Merely
changing someone’s health-care status (from insured to uninsured) is no more a
matter of federal fiscal policy than changing their immigration status was in 2021.
A flat federal
prohibition on states spending their own funds to provide health benefits to certain
classes of immigrants would obviously be driven by immigration policy concerns.That becomes no less true if one reconfigures
the provision to obtain some fiscal effects by slashing separate federal
payments to states.
Congress can, of
course, attach conditions to grant programs to ensure efficient and appropriate
expenditure of federal dollars, but that is not this provision.It does not seek to regulate federal Medicaid
funds but rather state-only spending.And states’ spending on immigrant health care likely saves the federal
government money by reducing the costs of uncompensated care that must be
shifted onto other health care funders (such as Medicare and Medicaid).It strains credibility to assert that
primarily fiscal motives drove this provision’s sponsors to want to pressure
states into acting to make their health care systems less efficient so the
federal government’s costs can rise.
Other provisions
of the House reconciliation bill also seem motivated by social policy rather
than fiscal concerns.For example, just
as opposition to abortion rather than a desire for savings motivated attempts
to defund Planned Parenthood through reconciliation, so too a desire to erode
the separation of church and state as much as possible seems to be motivating section
110109 of the House Bill.That section provides
a 100% tax credit specifically for certain kinds of contributions to private
schools in lieu of the usual deduction for charitable contributions.Setting up test cases in the Supreme Court is
not primarily fiscal policy.
Similarly, section
112008 of the House bill establishes a hellishly complicated
“foreign entities of concern” test for the clean energy credits provided under
the Inflation Reduction Act – and then eliminates
the underlying credits.Were the
legislation preserving the credits, reasonable people could debate whether this
new test is driven by fiscal concerns or the desire to make demonstrative
statements about foreign policy.Alternatively,
if the legislation applied the “foreign entities of concern” test to tax
preferences for the oil and gas industries – preferences that will continue – one
might believe that it seeks to achieve meaningful fiscal effects.As it stands, however, this provision is just
one more demonstration of hostility for China, which is not fiscal policy.
Republicans’
narrow margins in both House and Senate seem to have discouraged their
leadership from quashing obvious “Byrd bait” sought by Members.The Parliamentarian therefore seems likely to
have more work to do this year than on past reconciliation bills, where only a handful
of provisions raised problems under the Byrd Rule.In her thirteen years of service, spanning
multiple changes in Senate control, this Parliamentarian has shown that she is
up to the task.