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Can Congress enact one big beautiful reconciliation bill? 

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, of La., with House Republican Conference Chairwoman Lisa McClain, from left, Rep. Tim Moore, R-N.C. and House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, of La., speaks during a news conference at the Capitol, Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

President Trump has called for “one big beautiful bill” for reconciliation — the budget process for changing existing laws on taxes, mandatory spending and the debt limit to bring the overall budget totals into line with a budget resolution’s total for a fiscal year.

While the president initially said it did not matter whether his budget wishes were packaged in one or two reconciliation bills, last Wednesday morning he expressed support for the House’s single-bill approach. In the afternoon, Vice President JD Vance came down on the side of the Senate’s two-bill approach, with energy and border provisions in one bill and the renewal of the president’s massive tax cuts in the second.

What difference does it make? Reconciliation is like any other multi-purpose “omnibus” bill processed by Congress except it is brought under “fast track” procedures in the Senate. That means only a majority vote is needed in the Senate to preclude the 60-vote majorities otherwise required to end filibusters.   

It’s not often you see a linkage between aesthetics and legislating, but “one big beautiful bill” tweaks one’s curiosity as to what is beautiful about it and why you should care. For the president, the beauty is in the illusion, at least, of a fast-moving, one-stop approach that will be publicly pleasing and, perhaps, economically uplifting. Beauty is in the eye of the taxpayer.  

President Trump’s preference for “one big beautiful bill” brings to mind the term, a “bright shiny object,” because it is a catchy, attention-grabbing device that has at least superficial appeal. As a master salesman, Trump knows you have to dangle a flashy lure up-front to hook potential buyers on your spiel and reel them in. In the president’s case, the extension of his $4 trillion in expiring tax cuts are his thing of beauty — more a crown-jewel atop his 100-day second term agenda than a mere shiny object. 

The Senate finally wrapped up consideration on its budget resolution at 5:31 a.m. last Friday and then adopted the budget, 52 to 48. The House passed its budget resolution Tuesday evening on a down-to-the-wire, near party-line vote of 217 to 215

Whereas the Senate had a free-wheeling, open debate and votes on nearly two dozen amendments (what the Senate calls a “vote-a-rama”), the House budget procedures from the Rules Committee allowed for no amendments, but plenty of arm-twisting during abrupt recesses.

Keep in mind, though, budget resolutions only contain “instructions” for the committees of jurisdiction to report their tax or mandatory spending bill reconciliation measures. The appropriations committees in both chambers then need to report and pass their 12 separate discretionary spending bills to complete the annual fiscal cycle.   

The hard part will be getting the House and Senate committees on the same page for their respective reconciliation bills, then getting their chambers to agree on combining them into one or two omnibus bills. That process will involve heavy lifting and prolonged negotiations before consensus can be reached. 

The budget resolution is simply Congress’s skeletal frame to be fleshed-in by bill language funding the government through the rest of fiscal 2025 which ends on Sept. 30. If such a final, wrap-up bill is not signed into law by the president on March 14, more short-term, stop-gap CRs may be needed to keep to keep things open.

It seemed unlikely that House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) would have sufficient Republicans on board to pass a budget resolution with deficit numbers unacceptable to hardline fiscal conservatives. It seemed clear from the outset that Democrats were not inclined this time to help bail the Speaker out, and they did not. Once again, Trump reportedly made the difference with a few strategically-placed phone calls. 

Fiscal conundrums are nothing new in this age of bitter, intra- and inter-party differences. Bright, shiny wands are not in sufficient supply to induce the first branch to start pulling rabbits out of hats. Government shutdowns would only exacerbate an already topsy-turvy, turmoil-laden three-branch crisis. If you are holding out hope, hang-on tight: It could be a long and bumpy road ahead.         

Don Wolfensberger is a 28-year congressional staff veteran culminating as chief-of-staff of the House Rules Committee in 1995.  He is author of, “Congress and the People: Deliberative Democracy on Trial” (2000), and, “Changing Cultures in Congress: From Fair Play to Power Plays” (2018). 

Tags Budget resolution congress House Rules Committee House Speaker Mike Johnson JD Vance President Donald J. Trump Vice President JD Vance

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