In recent weeks, Democratic leaders have talked about using a process called the budget reconciliation process to pass an ambitious COVID relief package. The need for the tactic is obvious: Senate Republicans are prepared to kill the plan with a filibuster, and reconciliation will allow the Democratic majority to pass a proposal with 50 votes.
Yesterday, this stopped being abstraction. Roll Call reported:
The Senate voted to move forward with debate Tuesday on a budget blueprint that will set the stage for filibuster-proof passage of a massive coronavirus relief package. The 50-49 vote opens debate on the Democrats’ budget resolution, which would carve out room for up to $1.9 trillion in additional deficit spending, as proposed by President Joe Biden, on top of $3.5 trillion enacted last year.
The final roll call from yesterday’s vote is online here, but I’ll save you the trouble of scrutinizing it: every member of the Senate Democratic conference voted for it, while every member of the Senate Republican conference voted against it — except Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.), who wasn’t there. Had he participated, Vice President Kamala Harris would’ve broken the tie in Democrats’ favor.
As a procedural matter, this was really just the first of many steps. As the ball gets rolling, here are some of the questions to keep in mind:
What’s the next step? There will now be 50 hours of Senate debate, which appears unlikely to change any senators’ minds.
And then? The process will culminate in something called a “vote-a-rama,” which is a silly name for an exasperating process in which, thanks to arcane budget rules, senators push non-binding votes on literally hundreds of politicized amendments.
Once that’s done, can the Senate vote on a COVID relief proposal? Not so fast. After the lengthy debate and the votes on the amendments, lawmakers will vote on a budget resolution. If that passes, then Congress will begin work in earnest on the legislation itself, knowing that it can pass, if necessary, with just 50 votes.









