House Budget Chairman Jodie Arrington told My View that Republican leaders are preparing a second reconciliation bill to "greenlight funds for key conservative priorities," including border security, election-integrity measures and funding for the military.
"The only way we're going to legislate is with the most potent legislative tool, reconciliation," Arrington said, adding that the same process produced last year's large tax and spending package she described as the "one big beautiful bill." She said reconciliation can be crafted to include measures on voting procedures such as voter ID and cleaning voter rolls.
Host Laura cited comments from Sen. Lindsey Graham and asked whether parts of the Save America Act could be folded into reconciliation. Arrington replied that she and Graham were "in lock step on reconciliation 2.0" and said the strategy could strengthen border security and public safety while also packaging election-integrity language into the bill.
Arrington acknowledged narrow margins in the House and said she was "trying to rally my members" to secure passage. She framed the effort as a partisan response to what she described as Democratic obstructionism: "They have one play and that's obstruct the president," she said.
The congresswoman credited the prior reconciliation exercise with delivering what she called economic benefits, including business investment and lower inflation pressures; she argued those results justify using reconciliation again. Arrington urged colleagues to include defense resourcing and said offsets for those costs could come from other priorities she described as fraud-reduction measures.
No timetable or specific text for a second reconciliation bill was given during the interview, and Arrington did not cite the legislative mechanics (for example, how Byrd Rule constraints would apply) or offer a floor schedule. The interview closed without a vote or formal action reported.