Under the Byrd rule, the Senate
is prohibited from considering extraneous matter as part of a
reconciliation bill or resolution or conference report thereon.
The definition of what constitutes "extraneous matter"
is set forth in the Budget Act; however, the term remains subject
to considerable interpretation by the presiding officer (who relies
on the Senate Parliamentarian). The Byrd rule is enforced when
a Senator raises a point of order during consideration of a reconciliation
bill or conference report. If the point of order is sustained,
the offending title, provision or amendment is deemed stricken
unless its proponent can muster a 3/5 (60) Senate majority
vote to waive the rule.
Subject matter - The Byrd rule may be invoked only against reconciliation bills, amendments thereto, and reconciliation conference reports. Byrd rule tests - Section 313(b)(1) of the Congressional Budget Act sets forth six tests for matters to be considered extraneous under the Byrd rule. The criteria apply to provisions that:
Exceptions to the Byrd Rule - Section 313(b)(2) allows certain otherwise covered Senate-originated provisions to be excepted from the Byrd rule if the provisions are certified for exemption by the Senate Budget Committee chairman and ranking minority member, as well as the chairman and ranking minority member of the committee of jurisdiction. The permitted exceptions are:
Effect of points of order -
The effect of raising
a point of order under the Byrd rule is to strike the offending
extraneous provision. If a point of order against a conference
report is sustained, the Senate may consider subsequent motions
to dispose of that portion of the conference report not subject
to the point of order. Waivers - The Byrd rule is not self-enforcing. A point of order must be raised at the appropriate time to enforce it. The Byrd rule can only be waived by a 3/5 (60) majority vote of the Senate. |