In the United States, omnibus bills are sometimes known as "Big Ugly" bills. Examples include
reconciliation bills, combined
appropriations bills, and private relief and claims bills.
Appropriations legislation Omnibus legislation is routinely used by the
United States Congress to group together the budgets of all departments in one year in an omnibus spending bill. For example, the
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 was designed to help reduce the federal deficit by approximately $496 billion over five years through restructuring of the tax code.
Historical examples During the 19th century, there were three notable omnibus bills in the US. The
Compromise of 1850 had five disparate provisions designed by Senator
Henry Clay of
Kentucky. His purpose was to pacify sectional differences that threatened to provoke the secession of the
slave states. The
Fugitive Slave Act was the most infamous of the five compromise components, and was almost universally excoriated by
abolitionists, the chief exception being Sen.
Daniel Webster of
Massachusetts who prioritized preservation of the
Union. Senator
Thomas Hart Benton, a
Missouri slaveholder, opposed the omnibus compromise as an "unmanageable mass of incongruous bills, each an impediment to the other...." While this bill did not pass as the official Compromise of 1850, it got the ball rolling. To satisfy members of Congress,
Stephen A. Douglas separated the Compromise back into 5 separate bills and got it passed. Ultimately, disunion and civil war were delayed for a decade. In response, the 1861
Constitution of the Confederate States would ban omnibus legislation, requiring that every bill "shall relate to but one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title" (Article 1, Section 9.20). The Omnibus Act of June 1868 admitted seven southern
U.S. states as having satisfied the requirements of the
Reconstruction Acts. The
Enabling Act of 1889 provided for the admission of four new states to the Union —
North Dakota,
South Dakota,
Montana and
Washington. ==Canada==