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Playbook Deep Dive

Byrd nerds: Why the byzantine process of budget reconciliation exists and how it actually works

Playbook Deep Dive
Playbook Deep Dive
This week the Senate passed the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 using
the process known as budget reconciliation. The upside? No filibuster is
allowed. You only need a majority to approve a reconciliation bill. And
the downside? There are strict rules about what can be included. 

On the last episode of Playbook Deep Dive, Eric Ueland and Greg
D’Angelo, two GOP budget nerds, previewed the final challenges that the
Inflation Reduction Act would face to pass the Senate. They even nailed
one of the parliamentarian’s rulings: she nixed a portion of the bill
that would have applied inflation caps to the private pharmaceutical
market.

For their most significant policies, neither party has sixty votes.
Reconciliation is how presidents get big things through Congress now.
And it’s likely to be that way for the foreseeable future. To understand
how major policy changes can happen these days, you need to know how
this byzantine process works.

In this week’s episode, Eric and Greg step back and explain the long
history of reconciliation and how it has come to dominate lawmaking in
ways never anticipated when the process was created in the 1970s.

Ryan Lizza is a Playbook co-author for POLITICO.
Eric Ueland is a commissioner on the United States Commission on
International Religious Freedom.
Greg D'Angelo is a partner at the Nickles Group.
Afra Abdullah is associate producer for POLITICO audio.
Kara Tabor is producer for POLITICO audio.
Brook Hayes is senior editor for POLITICO audio.
Adam Allington is senior producer for POLITICO audio.
Jenny Ament is executive producer for POLITICO audio.
Playbook Deep Dive
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