WASHINGTON--The thing that really bothers me about Republicans use of the filibuster to derail bills and stall the Senates legislative process is not the tyrannical behavior of the GOP minority. It is the complicity of the Democratic majority.While the Senates 59-member Democratic caucus is one vote short of the 60 votes needed to cut off a filibuster, it has eight more votes than is required to stop the bodys 41 Republicans from using the tactic to effectively block the will of the majority.
For much of its history, the Senate permitted unlimited debate on an issue, but, in 1917, it enacted a rule that allowed a two-thirds majority of the bodys members to cut off debate.
That was reduced to a three-fifths vote in 1975.
Since then, the Senate has been required to get the backing of 60 of the bodys 100 senators to end a filibuster; a supermajority that flouts the basic idea of a majority-rule democracy.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (Dem., Nev.) has effectively dismissed some of his fellow Democrats efforts to change Senate rules so that, eventually, 51 votes would be enough to eliminate the filibuster.
Five years ago, when Republicans controlled the Senate, they threatened to do just that when Democrats used the filibuster to block 10 of President George W. Bushs judicial appointments. They call it a nuclear option--and for good reason.
The thing Senate Democrats and Republicans fear more than being in the minority is being out of power. The filibuster allows the bodys minority party to stop the majority from acting if it can rally to its side 41 of the Senates votes.
Until recently, the filibuster was used sparingly. But as party lines have come to mark this nations ideological divide, the filibuster has become the roadside bomb of the Senates minority party.
But as frustrated as each party has been by the others heavy-handed use of the filibuster, neither has been willing to detonate the nuclear option out of fear that such action would harm them, too.
As he spoke in support of ending the filibuster last week on MSNBCs The Rachel Maddow Show, former Democratic Party chairman Howard Dean seemed to wish it wouldnt come to that.
Even though having a filibuster would help us in the long run if we get back into the minority, which statistically someday were likely to do
I think for the good of the country, we probably have to go forward (and) eliminate the filibuster.
The filibuster is a Faustian bargain that undermines the will of voters.
The promise of change that swept Barack Obama into the presidency and padded Democratic majorities in the House of Representatives and Senate last year has been largely derailed by the Senates Republican minority, which has kept a broad array of legislation from coming to vote.
More than outrages, this legislative tyranny holds hostage our democracy to the whims of political part that was on the losing end of an election cycle.
The voters who gave Democrats control of Congress and the White House in the recent elections expect results, not inaction.
They expect Congress to bring bills to a vote, not allow a mean-spirited minority to filibuster them to death.
If Democrats wont use the majority voters gave them to end this bad practice, then they deserve to suffer their wrath in Novembers elections.