
Meet the Senate Parliamentarian, the Official Tying Republicans in Knots Over Their Tax Bill
Some Republicans expressed indignation Thursday after the Senate parliamentarian advised that some measures in their tax and immigration bill could not be included in the legislation.
Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., tweeted on X that Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough should be fired 'ASAP.' Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., intimated that she was partisan, asking, 'Why does an unelected swamp bureaucrat who was appointed by Harry Reid over a decade ago get to decide what's in the bill?'
It's hardly the first time the parliamentarian's normally low-key and lawyerly role has drawn public criticism. MacDonough also dashed Democratic plans over the years, advising in 2021 that they couldn't include a minimum wage increase in their COVID-19 relief bill. Later that same year, she advised that Democrats needed to drop an effort to let millions of immigrants remain temporarily in the US as part of their big climate bill.
But the attention falling on MacDonough's rulings in recent years also reflects a broader change in Congress, with lawmakers increasingly trying to wedge their top policy priorities into bills that can't be filibustered in the Senate. The process comes with special rules designed to deter provisions unrelated to spending or taxes–and that's where the parliamentarian comes in, offering analysis of what does and doesn't qualify.
Her latest round of decisions Thursday was a blow to the GOP's efforts to wring hundreds of billions of dollars from Medicaid over the next decade. Senate Republicans could opt to try to override her recommendations, but they are unlikely to do so.
Here's a closer look at what the Senate parliamentarian does and why lawmakers are so focused on her recommendations right now.
The crucial role of the parliamentarian
Both the House and Senate have a parliamentarian to provide assistance on that chamber's rules and precedents. They are often seen advising whoever is presiding over the chamber on the proper procedures to be followed and the appropriate responses to a parliamentary inquiry.
They are also charged with providing information to lawmakers and their respective staff on a strictly nonpartisan and confidential basis.
The parliamentarians and their staff only offer advice. Their recommendations are not binding.
In the case of the massive tax and spending bill now before both chambers, the parliamentarian plays a critical role in advising whether the reconciliation bill's provisions remain focused on fiscal issues.
How MacDonough became the first woman in the job
MacDonough, an English literature major, is the Senate's first woman to be parliamentarian and just the sixth person to hold the position since its creation in 1935. She began her Senate career in its library before leaving to get a law degree at Vermont Law School. She worked briefly as a Justice Department trial attorney before returning to the Senate in 1999, this time as an assistant in the parliamentarian's office.
She was initially appointed parliamentarian in 2012 by Democrat Harry Reid of Nevada, Senate majority leader at the time. She was retained by Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., when he became majority leader in 2015.
She helped Chief Justice John Roberts preside over Trump's 2020 Senate impeachment trial and was beside then-Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., for Trump's second trial the following year. Trump was acquitted both times.
When Trump supporters fought past police and into the Capitol in hopes of disrupting Congress' certification of Joe Biden's Electoral College victory, MacDonough and other staffers rescued those ballots and hustled mahogany boxes containing them to safety.
MacDonough's office on the Capitol's first floor was ransacked and declared a crime scene.
Can the Senate ignore the parliamentarian's advice?
Yes. The parliamentarian makes the recommendation, but it's the presiding officer overseeing Senate proceedings who rules on provisions in the bill. If there is a dispute, it would be put to a vote.
Michael Thorning, director of structural democracy at the Bipartisan Policy Center, a think tank, said he doubts Republicans will want to go that route. And indeed some Republican senators said as much Thursday.
'It's the institutional integrity, even if I'm convinced one hundred percent she's wrong,' said Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D.
Thorning said lawmakers from both parties view MacDonough as very much an honest broker. 'And the Senate relies on her,' Thorning said. 'Sometimes those decisions cut your way and sometimes they don't. I also think members recognize that once you start treating the parliamentarian's advice as just something that could be easily dismissed, then the rules start to matter less.'
Have parliamentarians been fired?
Majority leaders from both parties have replaced the parliamentarian. For more than three decades the position alternated between Robert Dove and Alan Frumin depending upon which party was in the majority.
Thorning said the two parliamentarians weren't far apart, though, in how they interpreted the Senate's rules and precedents. MacDonough succeeded Frumin as parliamentarian.
He said the small number of calls Thursday for her dismissal tells you all people need to know about the current parliamentarian. 'Senators know this isn't somebody playing politics,' Thorning said.
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