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Leg day: Fri → Fri (19d) Recess

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H.R. 2617 House Real Bill Signed into Law 117th Congress

Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023

4,155 Pages Released Before Dawn, Vote by Christmas

Legislative Progress Introduced Apr 16, 2021
House Origin → Both Chambers → President
House (origin)
Introduced
2
Committee
3
Passed House
Senate
4
Received in Senate
5
Committee
6
Passed Senate
President
President
Absurdity Index
8/10
7-8Hold My Gavel

A 4,155-page omnibus spending bill passed days before Christmas, funding the entire federal government for FY2023 with $1.7 trillion and a grab bag of policy riders nobody had time to read.

Sponsor
Gerald E. Connolly D
Committee
Committee on Appropriations
Introduced
Apr 16, 2021
Category
Budget

Party Balance

D
Primary Sponsor Gerald E. Connolly
Democrat
Cosponsors (2 total)

Party breakdown data not available

Pork by Party (satirical estimates) $65.6M total
R
$35.0M (53%)
D
$30.6M (47%)

Estimated Taxpayer Cost

$1,899,792

~24 hours of congressional session time at $79,158/hour

(535 members × $174k salary ÷ 147 session days ÷ 8 hours)

Simplified estimate based on salary costs only. Actual costs include staff, facilities, and lost productivity.

Satire notice: Spending figures, pork tracking, and editorial commentary below are satirical estimates for entertainment purposes. They are not official government cost analyses. Legislative history and vote records are real — verify at Congress.gov .

Pork Barrel Meter
$15.30B$45.95 per taxpayer
$0$100B$1T+
"Pig Farm"
Equivalent to ~20 sports stadiums

Satirical estimate for entertainment purposes

Watch the Sausage Get Made

See how this bill transformed through 5 stages of the legislative process.

Deep Dive

Official CRS Summary

Makes consolidated appropriations for fiscal year 2023, including regular annual funding and supplemental emergency assistance, by packaging multiple appropriations divisions and related policy provisions into a single enacted measure.

Read full summary on Congress.gov

Congressional Research Service Summary

The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 (H.R. 2617) provides FY2023 appropriations for federal agencies and includes several other provisions. The omnibus packages all 12 regular appropriations bills into a single legislative vehicle, providing $1.7 trillion in discretionary spending.

The bill was assembled in its final form over a period of approximately 72 hours, with the full text released early morning on December 20, 2022. Members of Congress had roughly 48 hours to review 4,155 pages of legislation before the first procedural votes.

The Process

In a healthy legislative process, Congress would pass 12 individual appropriations bills through subcommittee and full committee markups, floor debate, conference committees, and final passage — all before the September 30 fiscal year deadline.

In practice, Congress missed that deadline by nearly three months. The government operated on a series of continuing resolutions while leadership negotiated behind closed doors. The final product was released in the dead of night with a “take it or leave it” ultimatum backed by the threat of a government shutdown during the holiday season.

Notable Provisions

This omnibus included major policy changes that had nothing to do with annual spending:

  • Electoral Count Reform: Post-January 6th reforms to presidential election certification
  • SECURE 2.0: The most significant retirement policy changes in years
  • TikTok Government Device Ban: Because national security
  • Over 7,200 earmarks: Approximately $15.3 billion in member-directed spending (per GAO/CRS)

Source: This is a real bill signed into law in the 117th Congress. View on Congress.gov.

Disclaimer: The absurdity score and editorial commentary above represent this site’s opinion. Bill details should be verified at Congress.gov.

On earmark line items: The aggregate earmark totals (~7,234 projects totaling $15.3 billion) are verified figures from GAO/CRS reporting. The individual earmark examples shown on this page are satirical illustrations — they feature real members of Congress in their actual policy areas with approximate dollar figures, but specific project names, amounts, and attributions may not match exact congressional earmark disclosures. The real omnibus contained over seven thousand earmarks; we picked a representative handful to give you the flavor. This is satire, not an audited ledger.

This page is satirical commentary by AbsurdityIndex.org. Legislative history comes from public congressional records; spending estimates and "pork" figures are editorial and may not reflect official cost analyses. Absurdity scores are subjective editorial ratings. Verify all claims at Congress.gov