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Celerity

(50,988 posts)
16. The filibuster hurts only Senate Democrats -- and Mitch McConnell knows that. The numbers don't lie.
Wed Apr 7, 2021, 09:33 PM
Apr 2021
My own add - Sinema wants a 60 vote threshold on EVERY legislative action!. Not joking.



https://www.msnbc.com/opinion/filibuster-hurts-only-senate-democrats-mitch-mcconnell-knows-n1255787

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Cutting off debate in the Senate so legislation can be voted on is done through a procedure called "cloture," which requires three-fifths of the Senate — or 60 votes — to pass. I went through the Senate's cloture votes for the last dozen years from the 109th Congress until now, tracking how many of them failed because they didn't hit 60 votes. It's not a perfect method of tracking filibusters, but it's as close as we can get. It's clear that Republicans have been much more willing — and able — to tangle up the Senate's proceedings than Democrats. More important, the filibuster was almost no impediment to Republican goals in the Senate during the Trump administration. Until 2007, the number of cloture votes taken every year was relatively low, as the Senate's use of unanimous consent agreements skipped the need to round up supporters. While a lot of the cloture motions did fail, it was still rare to jump that hurdle at all — and even then, a lot of the motions were still agreed to through unanimous consent. That changed when Democrats took control of Congress in 2007 and McConnell first became minority leader. The number of cloture motions filed doubled compared to the previous year, from 68 to 139.

Things only got more dire as the Obama administration kicked off in 2009, with Democrats in control of the House, the Senate and the White House. Of the 91 cloture votes taken during the first two years of President Barack Obama's first term, 28 — or 30 percent — failed. All but three failed despite having majority support. The next Congress was much worse after the GOP took control of the House: McConnell's minority blocked 43 percent of all cloture votes taken from passing. Things were looking to be on the same course at the start of Obama's second term. By November 2013, 27 percent of cloture votes had failed even though they had majority support. After months of simmering outrage over blocked nominees grew, Senate Democrats triggered the so-called nuclear option, dropping the number of votes needed for cloture to a majority for most presidential nominees, including Cabinet positions and judgeships. The next year, Republicans took over the Senate with Obama still in office. By pure numbers, the use of the filibuster rules skyrocketed under the Democratic minority: 63 of 123 cloture votes failed, or 51 percent. But there's a catch: Nothing that was being voted on was covered by the new filibuster rules. McConnell had almost entirely stopped bringing Obama's judicial nominees to the floor, including Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland.

McConnell defended the filibuster on the Senate floor last week, reminding his counterparts of their dependence on it during President Donald Trump's term. "Democrats used it constantly, as they had every right to," he said. "They were happy to insist on a 60-vote threshold for practically every measure or bill I took up." Except, if anything, use of the filibuster plummeted those four years. There are two main reasons: First, and foremost, the amount of in-party squabbling during the Trump years prevented any sort of coordinated legislative push from materializing. Second, there wasn't actually all that much the Republicans wanted that needed to get past the filibuster in its reduced state after the 2013 rule change. McConnell's strategy of withholding federal judgeships from Obama nominees paid off in spades, letting him spend four years stuffing the courts with conservatives. And when Trump's first Supreme Court nominee, Neil Gorsuch, was filibustered, McConnell didn't hesitate to change the rules again. Trump's more controversial nominees also sailed to confirmation without any Democratic votes. Legislatively, there were only two things Republicans really wanted: tax cuts and repeal of Obamacare. The Trump tax cuts they managed through budget reconciliation, a process that allows budget bills to pass through the Senate with just a majority vote.

Republicans tried to do the same for health care in 2017 to avoid the filibuster, failing only during the final vote, when Sen. John McCain's "no" vote denied them a majority. The repeal wouldn't have gone through even if the filibuster had already been in the grave. As a result, the number of successful filibusters plummeted: Over the last four years, an average of 7 percent of all cloture motions failed. In the last Congress, 298 cloture votes were taken, a record. Only 26 failed. Almost all of the votes that passed were on nominees to the federal bench or the executive branch. In fact, if you stripped out the nominations considered in the first two years of Trump's term, the rate of failure would be closer to 15 percent — but on only 70 total votes. There just wasn't all that much for Democrats to get in the way of with the filibuster, which is why we didn't hear much complaining from Republicans. Today's Democrats aren't in the same boat. Almost all of the big-ticket items President Joe Biden wants to move forward require both houses of Congress to agree. And given McConnell's previous success in smothering Obama's agenda for political gain, his warnings about the lack of "concern and comity" that Democrats are trying to usher in ring hollow. In actuality, his warnings of "wait until you're in the minority again" shouldn't inspire concern from Democrats. So long as it applies only to legislation, the filibuster is a Republicans-only weapon. There's nothing left, it seems, for the GOP to fear from it — aside from its eventual demise.

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Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Fuck. That. Guy. Nt Fiendish Thingy Apr 2021 #1
Post removed Post removed Apr 2021 #2
Really bad news for voting rights. mucifer Apr 2021 #3
Hey Joe! leftieNanner Apr 2021 #4
Pull his wife off that Appalachian board soothsayer Apr 2021 #5
Making clear that it was a bribery attempt? FBaggins Apr 2021 #7
Drat soothsayer Apr 2021 #9
Free slogan for 2022 Senate Democrats: Qutzupalotl Apr 2021 #6
He'll be irrelevant then anyway. FoxNewsSucks Apr 2021 #12
Dude's about useless. Traitor to democracy. rickyhall Apr 2021 #8
And like the Repubs won't drop the filibuster... Dave says Apr 2021 #10
He'll vote to allow them to nuke it Bettie Apr 2021 #20
+1 uponit7771 Apr 2021 #22
His argument has nothing to do with the filibuster. honest.abe Apr 2021 #11
He's taken over the Susan Collins position and he is flexing his power and seeking attention. TheBlackAdder Apr 2021 #27
Hey Joe *******, is this what you call "equal footing"? FoxNewsSucks Apr 2021 #13
This message was self-deleted by its author Celerity Apr 2021 #14
so he now is now ruling out even MODIFICATIONS???!! Celerity Apr 2021 #14
The filibuster hurts only Senate Democrats -- and Mitch McConnell knows that. The numbers don't lie. Celerity Apr 2021 #16
AZ and WV will be flooded w/vaccinated constituents in the streets this summer Fiendish Thingy Apr 2021 #23
The part that is enraging me most is that they apparently are not even open to modifications of Celerity Apr 2021 #24
Hey, and I've said before.......I know people that will help Senator Manchin come to the right a kennedy Apr 2021 #17
time to go all LBJ on his ass... bahboo Apr 2021 #18
I think we all know this and it sucks msfiddlestix Apr 2021 #19
We will be incredibly lucky to gain 2 or 3 seats max in 2022. The numbers just are not there for Celerity Apr 2021 #25
oh geeze msfiddlestix Apr 2021 #26
Then the Biden presidency is over Takket Apr 2021 #21
Hmmmmm, hold Manchin responsible for his "30 days" metric !!!! uponit7771 Apr 2021 #28
Morning Joe mocks Joe Manchin for wanting to work with Republicans: 'I want my cat to play Chopin!' UCmeNdc Apr 2021 #29
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Joe Manchin: I will not v...»Reply #16