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THE BYRD RULE

RIGHT NOW WE MUST CALL SENATORS

AND REMIND THEM TO FOLLOW THE BYRD RULE.  

🦅 The Byrd Rule – Made Easy

The Byrd Rule is a special rule in the U.S. Senate. It limits what can go into a fast-track budget bill called a reconciliation bill — which only needs 51 votes to pass (instead of the usual 60 to beat a filibuster).

🔍 What the Byrd Rule Does

It stops Congress from sneaking non-budget stuff into budget bills.

That means:
✅ Money stuff (like taxes or spending) is OK
❌ Policy stuff (like rules about healthcare, immigration, or civil rights) usually is not allowed

🚫 A Provision Violates the Byrd Rule If It:

  • Doesn’t change federal spending or revenue

  • Adds to the deficit beyond 10 years

  • Is mainly about policy, not money

  • Tries to change Social Security (not allowed in reconciliation)

  • Has a tiny budget effect but is really about something else

 

⚖️ Who Enforces It?

  • The Senate Parliamentarian reviews the bill and gives an opinion

  • But a provision is only removed if a Senator objects during debate

  • It takes 60 votes to keep a provision that breaks the rule — otherwise, it’s stripped out

 

💡 Medicaid Example: The "Big Beautiful Bill"

Let’s say a bill tries to:

  • Ban Medicaid from covering gender-affirming care

  • Punish states for covering undocumented immigrants

  • Add work requirements for Medicaid

If these parts don’t have a big enough budget impact, they’re considered policy — not budget — and can be removed under the Byrd Rule.

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