Don't believe the GOP's charges of hypocrisy
on filibuster reform -- both parties are guilty
By Alex Seitz-Wald on
salon.com
In their war to preserve the filibuster, Senate Republicans have
deployed two main arguments, neither of which makes much sense. The
first is a
threat
to gum up the Senate even more than it is now if their right to stymie
things is diminished. That’s a bit like a child refusing to clean up his
room, then threatening to make his room even messier if his parents
don’t abide his temper tantrum.
The other argument is that
Democrats are being hypocritical in calling for reform, because they
defended the filibuster just a few short years ago when they were in the
minority, and thus their efforts should be dismissed out of hand.
“Then-Sen. Obama thought it would be wrong to make the changes when the
Republicans were in the majority; then-Sen. [Joe] Biden thought it was a
bad idea when the Democrats were in the minority; and Harry Reid
thought it was an awful idea when he was in the minority because he said
no one group should be able to run roughshod over the other group,”
said Wyoming Republican Sen. John Barrasso, who holds the No. 4 position in the GOP leadership.
On
this count, Republicans are absolutely right. In 2005, when the
Republican majority threatened to unilaterally override a Democratic
filibuster of President Bush’s judicial nominations, the minority
labeled the move the “nuclear option” and warned of all sorts of
apocalyptic scenarios if the GOP pushed the proverbial button.
“If
there were ever an example of an abuse of power, this is it … The
filibuster is the last check we have against the abuse of power in
Washington,”
said Reid, who was then the minority leader.
“To
basically trample and trench on those long-standing historic rules, I
think, would disrupt the Senate in a way that would make it extremely
difficult for it to function in any meaningful way for the rest of the
session,”
said liberal lion Ted Kennedy, in language that could easily come out of a Republican colleague’s mouth today.
Longtime
Senate Democrat Robert Byrd even invoked the nuclear option of
rhetoric. “Some in the Senate are ready to callously incinerate each
senator’s right of extended debate … Hitler never abandoned the cloak of
legality,” Byrd
said on the Senate floor. Ultimately, Republicans backed down and didn’t go nuclear (the Senate parliamentarian said he would
oppose the move, but the majority leader can overrule him).
But Republicans are equally guilty of changing their tune. On Monday, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell got in a
testy exchange
with Reid on the Senate floor over Democrats’ desire to change the
rules by a simple 51-vote majority. Doing so would mean ”breaking the
rules to change the rules,” McConnell said.
However, he was for
the idea before he was against it. “The current Senate majority intends
to do what the majority in the Senate has often done — use its
constitutional authority under Article 1, Section 5 to reform Senate
procedure by a simple majority,” McConnell
said on the Senate floor in 2005.
You
could find a similar speech railing against the minority’s abuse of the
filibuster and supporting a simple majority rule from almost every
Republican senator still in the chamber today. Senate Republicans
released a report that year via the Senate Republican Policy Committee
(RPC), the sort of official think tank of caucus controlled by the party
leadership, explaining how a simple majority can change the rules. They
even called it the “constitutional option,” the
same name Democratic Sen. Tom Udall of New Mexico gave to his filibuster reform plan that is gaining traction in the Democratic caucus.
Mysteriously, the 2005 GOP report has
disappeared from the Web. Now, when you search the Senate Republican Policy Committee website for “filibuster” you get
a recent report
that states: “Any assertion by Senate Democrats that a rules change
would require a simple majority vote ignores the plain language of the
Senate Rules.” Unfortunately for Republicans, Arizona Republican Sen.
Jon Kyl, then the chairman of the RPC, decided to enter the 2005 report
into the
Congressional Record, where it will live forever (ThinkProgress’ Ian Millhiser also
excerpted the report last year, apparently before it was removed). A sample:
This
constitutional option is well grounded in the U.S. Constitution and in
Senate history. The Senate has always had, and repeatedly has exercised,
the constitutional power to change the Senate’s procedures through a
majority vote.
So what are we to make of this? Which
side has the moral high ground in the filibuster fight? Neither.
They’ve both alternately opposed and supported the filibuster depending
on whether they were in the minority. One could argue that Republicans
have abused the filibuster more than Democrats since losing their
majority in 2006, but that’s beside the point
What is clear, as Steve Kornacki explained this morning, is that the filibuster
needs to be reformed regardless of who holds the majority. The status quo is simply unsustainable.
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