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Washington Week: Focus on Filibusters2
Until recent years, filibustering3 meant holding the Senate floor and speaking non-stop to prevent a vote, as portrayed4 by Jimmy Stewart in the 1939 movie Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.
Backers of racial segregation5 famously - or infamously6 - filibustered7 civil-rights legislation in the 1950s and 60s. Earlier this year, Republican Senator Rand Paul held the floor for 13 hours to draw attention to the use of domestic drones.
Most modern filibusters are never seen. A senator files a motion to prevent a vote, and unless a three-fifths supermajority disagrees, the vote is blocked. Once a rare practice, almost all Senate votes of consequence must now overcome a filibuster1.
“Is there anybody out there in America that thinks this body is functioning well," asked Majority Leader Harry8 Reid.
The Nevada Democrat9 says his party will move to change filibuster rules this week unless Republicans allow confirmation10 votes on high-profile nominees11 submitted by President Barack Obama to lead federal agencies. Reid says the ability of the government to function is at stake.
“The constitution gives the president, whoever that president may be, the right and the power to choose his team. It grants the Senate the right to advise and consent on those choices. But consistent and unprecedented12 obstruction14 by the Republican caucus15 has turned ‘advise and consent’ into ‘deny and obstruct’," he said.
Republicans warn of dire16 consequences for American democracy.
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said, “That [rules change] would violate every protection of minority rights that have defined the U.S. Senate for as long as anyone can remember. Let me assure you this Pandora’s Box, once opened, will be utilized17 again and again by future majorities."
In 2005, Democrats18 were in the minority and defended the filibuster to block judicial19 nominees submitted by then-President George W. Bush.
“They [Republicans] think the Senate should be a rubber stamp for this president," said Senator Reid at the time.
Then-majority leader Bill Frist accused Democrats of abusing the filibuster and setting a dangerous precedent13. “To enshrine new tyranny of the minority into the Senate rules forever," he said.
Changing the Senate rules by a simple majority vote has been dubbed20 the “nuclear option”, given its potential to forever alter America’s legislative21 landscape.
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