Congress' Budget Process Is Broken. Here's One Idea for Fixing It.
Lawmakers should be freed from "the dead hand of some guy from 1974," says former Congressional Budget Office director.

If you made a list of all the reasons why federal borrowing has spiraled out of control in recent years, the utter failure of Congress to pass a true budget would certainly rank near, or at, the very top.
Regular Reason readers know this fact well: Since 1996, Congress has never—yes, not even once—passed a budget on time and in full. It's probably not a coincidence that the late '90s were also the last time the federal budget was anywhere close to balancing.
In place of a complete budget, Congress has for decades relied upon continuing resolutions and omnibus bills. Usually, those become "must-pass" pieces of legislation that force lawmakers into up-or-down votes on the eve of some major deadline—like Christmas or a potential government shutdown—leaving no room for the necessary debating, prioritizing, and deciding that is fundamental to managing spending levels. It's a bad process and it predictably produces bad outcomes.
In theory, Congress could fix this anytime it wanted by reverting to so-called regular order and following the budget process codified by the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974. That's a good idea! It's something that congressional factions including the hard-right House Freedom Caucus and centrist Problem Solvers Caucus have both suggested.
In practice, however, it seems obvious that Congress lacks the incentives to do so. Maybe that's because leadership refuses to relinquish control over spending decisions to committees. Maybe it's because individual members of Congress care more about going viral than governing. Regardless, here we are in the 28th straight year without a budget and the national debt is approaching $35 trillion.
If Congress won't abide by the old budget rules, maybe what it needs are some new ones. That has to be better than the way things work now, argued Douglas Holtz-Eakin, former director of the Congressional Budget Office, an entity that was also created by the 1974 budget act.
"I think Congress should pass a budget process reform bill, and I don't care what's in it," Holtz-Eakin, now the president of the American Action Forum, said during a recent conversation with Santi Ruiz in his Statecraft newsletter.
The process of writing and passing a new set of rules for the budget process would give current lawmakers a stronger obligation to actually follow those rules, Holtz-Eakin says.
"So it's not the dead hand of some guy from 1974 telling me to do something," he said. "But if they agreed, then at least for a couple of years, they're going to feel obligated to do that, and we'd have a process that functions."
Rewriting fundamental rules for how Congress operates does carry some risk, of course. It means you'd be trusting the current clown car of federal lawmakers to make prudent decisions with an eye toward future generations—something they are clearly not too good at doing, or else we wouldn't have a nearly $35 trillion national debt.
But Holtz-Eakin's point is that even a less-good budget process would be better than a budget process that everyone ignores. That's probably correct. A new budget act could also be an opportunity to build in some structural restraints to Congress' willingness to borrow and borrow and borrow some more. There could be a specific debt-to-GDP target, for example, that would provide a guardrail against reckless deficit spending.
Any change to congressional process is only as good as Congress' willingness to abide by the new rules.
Even so, this is an idea worth exploring—one that might restore some legitimacy to the institution responsible for controlling the federal purse strings and some sanity to the federal budget.
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The only fix is for the ship to collide with the iceberg. All 3 chambers would need to be flooded.
I was thinking a localized but powerful earthquake during a State of the Union Address. Or maybe show support for Hawaii by having it on the summit of Mauna Loa.
Can’t fault you for thinking this way.
Build a giant rocket under DC and launch the whole city into the Sun.
Fuck you, stop spending.
Except on your precious illegal immigrants. Thought we did this this morning.
Eric! You think committees would solve the problem?
Bullshit. Committees are filled by people who WANT to be on the committee because that’s where the power is. Farmer cronies choose farm committees. Energy cronies choose energy committees. Chicken hawks choose military committees.
And the leadership goes along with it by forbidding floor amendments and discussions. Straight up or down vote. In effect, the committees make decisions for the entire body.
Get rid of committees, don’t empower new ones.
Committees have one and only one purpose, and that is to prevent bills from going to the floor for a vote.
In the absence of committees how would you carry out business. It is easy to talk about getting rid of committee, but there is no real way to function without them. Committees are used in government, private sector, charitable and religious organizations. Committees evolved naturally as people began to work together.
BTW - committees are often mocked, but as a professor once told me. The answer to the question of what has ever been successfully done by committees is The King James Bible.
"I think Congress should pass a budget process reform bill"
If Congress can't follow its own 1974 budget law to pass a budget, it certainly is not going to be able to pass a budget process reform bill, and I don't care what's in it. But dream on ... dream on ...
If Congress can’t follow its own 1974 budget law to pass a budget, it certainly is not going to be able to pass a budget process reform bill, and I don’t care what’s in it.
But they'll really mean it this time.
Courts have long held that Congress cannot “bind” future Congresses—that is, it can’t force a future session of Congress to carry on its own policies. That practice, formally known as “legislative entrenchment,” is seen as privileging one group of lawmakers over another, “binding” future to the priorities set in the present. In the 1996 case U.S. v. Winstar Corp., Justice David Souter quoted the British jurist William Blackstone, who said that “the legislature, being in truth the sovereign power, is always of equal, always of absolute authority: it acknowledges no superior upon earth, which the prior legislature must have been, if it’s [sic] ordinances could bind the present parliament.” The principle is more complicated in the United States, where the government is bound by the Constitution and any private contracts into which it enters. But as a general rule, any Congress can reverse the decisions of any past Congress. For example, Bob Dole repealed future tax cuts in the 1980s.
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2010/07/can-today-s-congress-tell-tomorrow-s-congress-what-to-do-no-maybe-sort-of.html
The process of writing and passing a new set of rules for the budget process would give current lawmakers a stronger obligation to actually follow those rules, Holtz-Eakin says.
This is the crux of the article and it's utterly absurd. It's like a battered wife saying, "I know he's continued to beat me despite countless promises to stop, but you have to understand, this time he pinky swore!" We already established that the incentive for the leadership is to continue to make a hash of the treasury. A new promise to be good boys and girls isn't going to change that.
I know none of us like baseline budgeting, but how about this - pass a funding bill that funds the government for the next ten years, only cutting spending by a third from this year. Then, if a budget doesn't get passed, we don't get "ERMIGAAAD!!! THE GOVERNMENT IS GOING TO SHUT DOWWWNN!!" from the usual suspects (including a number of columnists here). We just get significant spending cuts. If Congress wants to spend more or (in Fantasyland) less, they can work around that baseline.
""So it's not the dead hand of some guy from 1974 telling me to do something," he said. "But if they agreed, then at least for a couple of years, they're going to feel obligated to do that, and we'd have a process that functions.""
Did anybody ask him how many times since 1974 was the budget ACTUALLY produced properly per the Act?
Four.
They ignored it WHEN THEY PASSED THE DAMNED THING.
The same folks who voted for it did not do it.
You need a President to tell them an omnibus bill will not be signed, period. If you insist on sending one, the government shutdown will be on you.
I think the answer is to insist that passing a budget must be the first act of Congress and that it cannot pass any other bills until the budget is passed.
If you haven’t figured it out yet…
‘Democracy’ isn’t going to save a USA. The USA is defined by a US Constitution (Supreme Law). That Law is what will save the USA and abiding by that law *instantly* cuts 87% of the federal spending budget by order of the the people’s LAW over their own government.
Electing politicians who actually obey the Supreme LAW and one’s who will elect SCOTUS justices who know how to read (seriously; that about covers that) is all that’s needed. It is the LAW!
We will never have a USA with Al’Capone and Hitler-wananbe’s constantly representing this nation. They MUST follow the Supreme LAW (the very definition of what a USA is).