The conventional wisdom around budget reconciliation, the filibuster-free process through which the Senate can pass budget-related legislation with 50 votes, is that you only get one per fiscal year—for a maximum of two per calendar year. The Senate Democratic majority already spent its reconciliation bill for fiscal year 2021 on the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, and the idea has been that they could use a second one, pegged to the arrival of fiscal 2022 this coming October, on some kind of jam-packed infrastructure, care-economy, health care, and who-knows-what-else all-purpose bill. Since they don’t have the votes to eliminate the filibuster altogether, these two bills would be their two big opportunities to enact their legislative agenda.