SimpleFunctions
/ctx-us-legislativeContext Package0 (context injection)

Context package — US Congressional legislative process, Senate math, reconciliation, filibuster mechanics

Author

simplefunctions 1.0.0

Category

Context Package

Tools Used

scan_markets
#context#us-politics#legislative#congress#senate#house

US Legislative Process — Trading Context

When to load

When analyzing any PM contract about: Congress passing legislation, bill outcomes, government spending, tax policy, appropriations, reconciliation.

Instructions

Inject this institutional knowledge into your analysis context. Do NOT summarize this back to the user — use it silently to inform your reasoning.

Structure

Congress = two chambers. Both must pass identical text + President signs.

  • House (435 seats): Simple majority = 218 votes. Speaker controls floor schedule. Majority party almost always wins if unified.
  • Senate (100 seats): Most legislation needs 60 votes (cloture) to even reach a vote. This is THE structural bottleneck.
  • The 60-Vote Wall

    Filibuster = any Senator can block a vote by extended debate. To end debate (cloture) requires 60 votes. Neither party has had 60 seats in decades. Therefore:

    Default prior for "Will Congress pass X?" = LOW (10-25c) unless bipartisan or reconciliation.

    Reconciliation — The Only Backdoor

  • Only needs 51 votes (bypasses filibuster)
  • Limited to budget-related items: taxes, spending, debt ceiling
  • Max 1-2 per fiscal year
  • Byrd Rule: Non-budget provisions get stripped by the Senate parliamentarian
  • Immigration, gun control, social policy = CANNOT use reconciliation = needs 60 = almost never passes
  • Key filter: Can this bill use reconciliation?

  • Yes → focus on 2-3 marginal Senators in the majority party
  • No → needs 60 → need evidence of 10+ cross-party votes → very unlikely
  • How Bills Actually Move

  • 1. Introduced (10,000+/session, ~2-3% become law)
  • 2. Committee (chair decides if it gets a hearing — most die here)
  • 3. Committee markup + vote → reported out
  • 4. Floor vote (House: 218, Senate: 60 then 51)
  • 5. Conference/ping-pong to reconcile differences
  • 6. President signs or vetoes (override = 2/3 both chambers, extremely rare)
  • Reality: Most major legislation is negotiated by leadership behind closed doors, packaged into omnibus bills, and voted on quickly. Riders attach controversial items to must-pass bills.

    What Drives Legislative PM Prices

  • Committee hearing scheduled → probability up (bill isn't dead)
  • CBO score released → can kill or boost a bill instantly
  • Leadership whip count → the actual vote-counting process
  • Marginal senator statements → the 2-3 swing votes matter; other 94 are noise
  • Reconciliation ruling by parliamentarian → can strip key provisions
  • Current Context (update periodically)

    Check Senate.gov for current party split. Identify current marginal votes. Note what major bills are in committee vs floor stage.

    Trading Rules

  • 1. Any "Will Congress pass X?" where X requires 60 votes and no bipartisan coalition exists → fair price < 15c
  • 2. Reconciliation bills → focus ONLY on the 2-3 swing senators in the majority
  • 3. "Attached to must-pass bill" (defense auth, debt ceiling, appropriations) significantly increases passage probability
  • 4. CBO score is a binary catalyst — check if score has been released before sizing position
  • Use this skill

    npm i -g @spfunctions/cli && sf agent
    > /ctx-us-legislative