Eliminate Filibuster and With it the Need to Debate Republicans

By David Swanson

From the pains Democrats take to out-argue and/or to compromise with the fringe minority party called the Republicans you'd think no other course of action was available, specifically you'd have to assume that the filibuster -- the power of senators representing 11 percent of us to block all work by the House and Senate -- is written in stone. In reality, 51 senators could eliminate the filibuster or change the number of votes required to use it. This nation got along for many years without the filibuster and could do so again. It is no more a part of our Constitution than the CIA, enemy combatants, corporate persons, or the political parties that allow the filibuster to wreak such havoc with our so-called democracy.

For the most part we no longer have representatives in Congress, because of the corruption of money, the weakness of the media, and the strength of parties. There are not 535 opinions on Capitol Hill on truly important matters, but 2. Our supposed representatives work for their party leaders, not for us. Luckily, one of the two parties claims to want to work for us.

When the Democrats were in the minority and out of the White House, they told us they wanted to work for us but needed to be in the majority. So, in 2006, we put them there. Then they told us that they really wished they could work for us but they needed bigger majorities and the White House. So, in 2008, we gave them those things, and largely deprived them of two key excuses for inaction. We took away the veto excuse and came very close to taking away the filibuster excuse, and -- in fact -- the filibuster excuse could be taken away completely if the Democrats didn't want to keep it around.

This is not to say that either excuse was ever sensible. The two most important things the 110th Congress refused to do (ceasing to fund illegal wars, and impeaching war criminals) did not require passing legislation, so filibusters and vetoes were not relevant. But the Democrats in Congress, and the Republicans, and the media, and the White House all pretended that wars could only be ended by legislation, so the excuses for not passing legislation loomed large. The veto excuse is now gone. The filibuster excuse could be gone this week if Senator Harry Reid wanted it gone, or if President Obama appointed a Republican senator from a state with a Democratic governor to a cabinet position without allowing a corrupt deal on the senator's replacement, or if the House and Senate were to give Washington D.C. voting representation.

The filibuster excuse works like this. Any 41 senators can vote No on "cloture", that is on bringing a bill to a vote, and that bill will never come to a vote, and anything the House of Representatives has done won't matter. Plus any of the other 59 senators, the 435 House members, the president, the vice president, television pundits, and newspaper reporters can blame the threat of filibuster for anything they fail to do.

Now, the Senate itself is and always has been and was intended to be an anti-democratic institution. It serves no purpose that is not or could not be more democratically accomplished by the House alone. The Senate should simply be eliminated by Constitutional Amendment. But the filibuster is the most anti-democratic tool of the Senate, and can be eliminated without touching the Constitution, which does not mention it. If you take 41 senators from the 21 smallest states, you can block any legislation with a group of multi-millionaires elected by 11.2 percent of the American public. That fact is a national disgrace that should be remedied as quickly as possible.

The filibuster was created by accident when the Senate eliminated a seemingly redundant practice of voting on whether to vote. Senators then discovered, after a half-century of surviving just fine without the filibuster, that they could block votes by talking forever. In 1917 the Senate created a rule allowing a vote by two-thirds of those voting, to end a filibuster. In 1949 they changed the rule to require two-thirds of the entire Senate membership. In 1959 they changed it back. And in 1975 they changed the rule to allow three-fifths of the Senators sworn into office to end a filibuster and force a vote. Filibustering no longer requires giving long speeches. It only requires threatening to do so. The use of such threats has exploded over the past 10 years, dominating the decision-making process of our government and effectively eliminating the possibility of truly populist or progressive legislation emerging from Congress. This has happened at the same time that the forces of money, media, and party have led the Democrats in both houses to view the filibuster excuse as highly desirable, rather than as an impediment.

Were the Democrats serious about eliminating the filibuster excuse, they would either take every step possible to get 60 senators into their caucus, or they would change the rule requiring 60 senators for cloture. Possible steps to reach that magic number of 60 would include appointing Republican senators from states with Democratic governors to key jobs in the Obama administration and immediately seating their replacements, and providing Washington, D.C., with a House member and two senators (this last approach changing the magic number to 61 and potentially providing the 60th and 61st Democrats). Simpler and more certain would be simply changing the rule, specifically Senate Rule 22, which reads in part:

"'Is it the sense of the Senate that the debate shall be brought to a close?' And if that question shall be decided in the affirmative by three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn -- except on a measure or motion to amend the Senate rules, in which case the necessary affirmative vote shall be two-thirds of the Senators present and voting -- then said measure, motion, or other matter pending before the Senate, or the unfinished business, shall be the unfinished business to the exclusion of all other business until disposed of."

This would seem to suggest that it takes 60 senators to block a filibuster and 66 senators (if 100 are present, otherwise fewer) to end the power of 60 senators to block filibusters. But that's not the whole story. William Greider recently explained:

"In 1975 the filibuster issue was revived by post-Watergate Democrats frustrated in their efforts to enact popular reform legislation like campaign finance laws. Senator James Allen of Alabama, the most conservative Democrat in the Senate and a skillful parliamentary player, blocked them with a series of filibusters. Liberals were fed up with his delaying tactics. Senator Walter Mondale pushed a campaign to reduce the threshold from sixty-seven votes to a simple majority of fifty-one. In a parliamentary sleight of hand, the liberals broke Allen's filibuster by a majority vote, thus evading the sixty-seven-vote rule. (Senate rules say you can't change the rules without a cloture vote, but the Constitution says the Senate sets its own rules. As a practical matter, that means the majority can prevail whenever it decides to force the issue.) In 1975 the presiding officer during the debate, Vice President Rockefeller, first ruled with the liberals on a motion to declare Senator Allen out of order. When Allen appealed the "ruling of the chair" to the full Senate, the majority voted him down. Nervous Senate leaders, aware they were losing the precedent, offered a compromise. Henceforth, the cloture rule would require only sixty votes to stop a filibuster."

The credibility of the filibuster excuse has collapsed, because the Democrats are now publicly admitting, through their actions, that they prefer to keep that excuse around.

Greider proposes reducing to 55 percent of the Senate the number of senators needed for cloture. I propose reducing it to 50 percent plus one. Either way, nobody is proposing that a minority be empowered to decide anything, only that a majority finally be permitted to (even to the extent allowed by an anti-democratic body like the U.S. Senate in which both Wyoming and California have the same number of senators). Should that happen, all I can say to Wall Street and the military industrial complex is: get ready to be shocked and awed!

The Democrats are choosing to keep the filibuster excuse around, meaning that our job is to overwhelm them and the media with our refusal to believe it. Or, if you prefer, our job is to lobby for a change in the filibuster rule. Otherwise, we can shout for peace and justice and stimulus and the right to organize, and it's all just shouting, because we are being played for suckers.

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Rate the U.S. "democracy"

Democracy is defined as government in which the people make the governing decisions either directly or through representatives. I like Lincoln's definition of government "of the people, by the people and for the people".

If we looked at democracy on a sliding scale with the most participation by the people being the highest form or closest to the definition and then looked at what would be the least form of democracy. No participation from the citizens other than regular elections to pick from candidates selected by party and power. Where does the U.S. fit? Is it possible our populace could actually realize that we are not number one and really the only difference between us and the old Soviet Union is that we have two parties which create the illusion of democracy, while they only had one and were spared such illusions.
Nick Egnatz
Veterans For Peace

We're very close, my friend.

I think the internet will encourage people to get more involved. Once the majority of people see the disconnect (and truth) between what the corporate press drones into people and the actual truth (it's hard to dispute video for evidence eg. YouTube), they'll shun the MSM and then corporate press has two options. Tell the truth or die. (the only problem with this caveat is the pending depression coming will force many off their computer and on to OTA broadcast TV- Tokyo Rose Central for the news, as is PBS on the radio, now that I think about it). Americans for too long have forgotten that the only way to keep a democracy is actively keeping it honest. It's a constant job!

I'm all for eliminating the filibuster because I believe it was intended to protect small or important interests outside of the mainstream, but the rethugs are using it for a tiny group of people (captains of industry) and are getting paid well for their corruption. Tyranny of the majority in reverse! And yes, I believe a lot of the Democrats have finally crossed the line, into being stained by same corruption, by a concerted effort by big business to basically buy up ALL of Washington. It's been working all too well, I'm afraid.

Get involved, people! After all it's your government, but only if you mow the grass occasionally :)

Resistance to Change

While it now seems like a good idea to eliminate the filibuster, it was not so long ago that Democrats in the Senate were in a panic over Republican moves to do just that. You may recall all the talk about the nuclear option that Republicans were threatening. The threat was to eliminate the filibuster so that Republicans could push through their favored Supreme Court nomination.

Democrats folded, letting the nomination go through but preserving the filibuster. At that time, Democrats were in the minority in the Senate and the filibuster was their only claim to power. No doubt, Democrats think that they will someday again be in the minority, so they will approach the elimination of the filibuster with some caution.

Of course Democrats never used the filibuster as ruthlessly as the Republicans did in the last session of congress. Sadly also, under Harry Reid, Democrats have not been as forceful at breaking filibusters as the Republicans were. Harry Reid just does not seem to relish controversy.

In the last congress, Republicans filibustered a record number of times and there is no reason to think that in this session they will try to again set a record. Something needs to be done to limit the filibuster even if the will is not there to eliminate it. An approach is presented in a short article: http://www.opednews.com/articles/Now-What--More-Piracy-by-PrMaine-081106...

Perhaps this can help launch a discussion of the possibilities.

End the filibuster?

I do not want to end the filibuster I want to return to the days when senators had to keep talking. When a republican threatens Harry Reid ought to say "go right ahead and I will supply the water and books." Let the public see real obstructionism.

Call Harry Reid and tell him to take the challenge.

Filibuster

Don't end, change. Harry Reid needs to take on the repub. challenge whenever a threat of filibuster is offered. He needs to say "go ahead and I will provide the water and books." He needs to force them to obstruct with the public viewing this. Where is Jimmy Stewart when we need him?

Call Harry Reid's office. Flood his telephone line.

Bye Bye Harry

The filibuster must go and so does *harry reid. I have carried a chicken with harry's name on it for the last two years to every protest I go to.

*will use non-capitals for people I dislike.

Filibuster==huh?

How can the Demos do away with the filabuster--? The 'saving of the filibuster' was the single and only and lonesome victory Reid had in the 8 terrible years just gone.

And they only saved it by catering to the 'Pugs and promising to not use it unless they approve and let them. Not one filabuster but lots of promise to keep their powder dry.

Change is good

50 + 1 seems about right.

Abolish the Senate

I'll raise the bet. I propose we do away with the Senate. The Senate is a rich man's club, not unlike the House of Lords. It also gives too much power to the elite land owners from small states. We already have three coequal branches of government and the associated balance of power. Why do we need two legislative bodies? Many of the world's democracies do just fine with one legislative body. Having two just slows down the democratic will of the people and minimizes it due to corporate lobbying efforts, especially if the filibuster is in play. The Senate must go!

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