Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., is — to put it mildly — disliked. Yet in the early morning hours Wednesday, as the Senate debated a $3.5 trillion budget resolution, every U.S. senator but four voted for an amendment Hawley proposed that advocated putting 100,000 more police officers on the streets.
Earlier in the evening, all 99 senators present approved a similar amendment from Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., that would strip federal funding from local governments that “defund the police.”
For advocates and others who would very much like more police accountability, not spending more money to hire officers, this felt like a betrayal. How could the Democrats, who had talked such a big game about police reform, have rolled over so easily?
Just a couple of hours ago, every Senate Democrat voted with Republicans on an amendment to the infrastructure and budget bill that would eliminate federal funding for local governments that defund the police.
— Black Lives Matter (@Blklivesmatter) August 11, 2021
Well, the answer is simple: They didn’t. At least not substantively. The votes were part of the budget resolution process known in that all-too-cute Washington way as “vote-a-rama.” Senators spend hours introducing and voting upon amendments that, in short, do absolutely nothing.
You see, step one in the plan to get the bulk of President Joe Biden’s economic agenda through Congress was to pass the bipartisan infrastructure bill in the Senate. Step two was approving the budget resolution that will let Democrats invest in progressive priorities like mitigating climate change and extending the child tax credit expansion.
As part of the race to approve that resolution, and finally go on vacation, the Senate spent roughly 14 hours going through 47 amendments. A lot of those amendments involved creating “a deficit-neutral reserve fund,” which is a phrase no normal human has ever uttered.
So, what is a deficit-neutral reserve fund? To answer that, let’s start with a simple fact: U.S. senators love two things: No. 1, the rules of the Senate; No. 2, figuring out loopholes to the rules of the Senate.
Under the Senate’s rules, any amendment to a budget resolution has to deal with actual outlays or intakes of funds — that’s why the Senate parliamentarian vetoed raising the minimum wage via the Covid-19 relief bill debate earlier this year.
But the process that took place earlier this week was only the first half of a longer process. The resolution that was debated and eventually passed was basically the instruction manual for Senate committees on how to spend certain top-line amounts of money. As I explained previously, the committees then go and figure out actual legislation to flesh out that vague outline. Once that work is done, the committees’ efforts are put together into one giant spending bill that meets the guidelines the first resolution established.
The loophole comes when you realize that all the amendments the Senate went through are entirely nonbinding. Committees aren’t required to act on any of them. That goes double when you realize “a deficit-neutral reserve fund” is basically a work of fiction.
Dylan Matthews — now at Vox, then writing for The Washington Post — explained it like this in 2013:








