San Diego Union-Tribune

DEMOCRATS WIN KEY TOOL TO ENACT BIDEN’S PLANS

Parliament­arian in Senate rules party can use fast option

- BY EMILY COCHRANE Cochrane writes for The New York Times.

A top Senate official ruled Monday that Democrats could use the fasttrack budget reconcilia­tion process for a second time this fiscal year, potentiall­y handing them broader power to push through President Joe Biden’s agenda, including his infrastruc­ture plan, over Republican opposition.

The decision by the parliament­arian means that Democrats can essentiall­y reopen the budget plan they passed in February and add directives to enact the infrastruc­ture package or other initiative­s, shielding them from a filibuster that requires 60 votes to overcome.

It came as Democratic leaders were contemplat­ing how to use their slim majorities in the House and Senate to enact Biden’s infrastruc­ture proposals, including a huge public-works plan he released last week and a second initiative to be released in the coming months to address economic inequities, provide paid leave to workers and support child care.

But the decision has potential significan­ce beyond those plans, and even the current Congress. The guidance could substantia­lly weaken the filibuster by allowing the majority party to use budget reconcilia­tion — a powerful tool that allows measures related to taxes and spending to pass on a majority vote — multiple times in a single fiscal year. That would dilute the power of the minority to stall or block such legislatio­n in the Senate, the latest bid by the party in power to chip away at the arcane filibuster rules.

It was not clear how Democrats would use their newfound power, or for what. But the preliminar­y guidance from Elizabeth MacDonough, the parliament­arian, most likely gives them additional opportunit­ies to push elements of Biden’s agenda through the 5050 Senate without abolishing the filibuster or watering down their proposals to win at least 10 Republican votes.

Democrats had already used budget reconcilia­tion to push through Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus last month without Republican votes. But with some Democrats reluctant to dismantle the filibuster, the rest of Biden’s agenda risks stalling amid Republican objections.

Seeking alternativ­e avenues, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., the majority leader, had argued that the rules allowed the Senate to revisit the budget blueprint that allowed for passage of the pandemic relief plan and take at least one more crack at reconcilia­tion before the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30.

Because there was no precedent for doing so, he asked MacDonough, a nonpartisa­n civil servant who interprets Senate rules, for guidance. On Monday, she blessed the maneuver, according to Justin Goodman, a spokesman for Schumer, who said that “some parameters still need to be worked out.”

The ruling “allows Democrats additional tools to improve the lives of Americans if Republican obstructio­n continues,” Goodman said in a statement, calling the opinion “an important step forward” in ensuring that “this key pathway is available to Democrats if needed.”

Democrats already had two more opportunit­ies to use the reconcilia­tion process during the 117th Congress, under budget blueprints for fiscal years 2022 and 2023. But the ruling from MacDonough allows them to use the maneuver at least two more times during this calendar year alone, and could further increase the opportunit­ies for them to do so before the end of 2022.

The option does not guarantee a smooth path for Biden’s agenda; with narrow majorities in both chambers, party leaders will have to keep Democrats almost entirely united to be able to use the maneuver successful­ly. And reconcilia­tion is subject to strict budgetary rules that limit what can be included.

Top Democratic officials have declined to say when they will use the budget tool again. But lawmakers and aides have floated a number of possibilit­ies, ranging from infrastruc­ture to immigratio­n, that could be steered around Republican objections and into law.

“It’s important because it gives us a little more flexibilit­y — we don’t have to push everything into one package,” Sen. Bernie Sanders, IVt., who is chairman of the Budget Committee, said on MSNBC, listing priorities he wanted to pass. “The ruling of the parliament­arian gives us a little bit more opportunit­y in that direction.”

Progressiv­e lawmakers have agitated for a change to the rules of the Senate that would allow the party to dismantle the filibuster.

But any effort to pass further legislatio­n with a simple majority will be considerab­ly more difficult than it was with the stimulus package, which cleared both chambers and became law in less than three months.

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