This was the
year when the power of the filibuster, the 96-year-old parliamentary maneuver that
lets the minority control the Senate, was supposed to be brought under control.
Nevada Sen.
Harry Reid, the Democratic Majority Leader, said he had seen the light and could
support the changes to the rule that he had previously rejected.
Maine’s brand
new independent Sen. Angus King, who promised to support major revisions to the
rule if he got to Washington, was in a key position to trade his lining up with
the Democrats for improvements proposed by a few of his colleagues.
A simple
majority is 51 votes. There are now 55
Democrats (including two independents) and 45 Republicans in the Senate, so the
majority ought to be able to pass legislation.
It didn’t happen.
The
filibuster requires that 60 senators agree to end debate on an issue. Effectively, that has come to mean that
almost nothing important can pass the Senate without that supermajority.
Instead of
fixing the problem, the Senate tinkered with it. In all the votes taken in the Senate through
May 10 this year, 60 votes were required 31 percent of the time. Last year, during the same period, the
supermajority was needed 58 percent of the time.
That may look
like progress, but the change was a procedural illusion, the result of a minor
revision that is far from blocking the ability of the minority to control.
At the
beginning of each new Congress, a simple majority is all that’s required to
change the filibuster rule. So why
didn’t the Democrats make the change?
They were
afraid. They preferred to allow the GOP
to hamstring their president and their majority, because they worried about what
would happen if someday they found themselves in the same position as the
Republicans.
And what
about King, a man who, as a mature and independent politician, might be less
concerned about doing the traditional thing, instead being willing to use the
platform that his special status gives him?
If he acted
truly independently, he would have probably displeased Sen. Reid, who would
then have assigned him to minor committees instead the prime spots he got on
the Armed Services, Intelligence and Budget Committees.
On Armed
Services, for example, he may be able to support B.I.W. or the Portsmouth
shipyard. That may have seemed more important than real reform.
What Reid and
King did shows the way Washington works.
But these
days, Washington is not producing results.
And the filibuster has a lot to do with that.
We read how a
bipartisan bill to require broader background checks for gun purchasers was
“defeated” in the Senate. That supposed
loss came despite the support of 54 senators for the bill. But 60 were needed.
People may
argue about some provisions of the Constitution, but it is remarkably clear in
defining those few instances when more than a simple majority is required in
the Senate. The senators have simply amended the Constitution to suit the
minority.
Reliance on
the supermajority may be less valuable than it seems.
In plugging
her new book, former Maine Sen. Olympia Snowe, a Republican, relates how she
might have been able to support the Affordable Care Act – Obamacare – if the
Democrats had been willing to accommodate some of her concerns.
But the
Democrats had 60 senators, enough to pass their bill without compromising.
Then, two
unexpected things happened. The House Democrats narrowly passed another version
of the bill that was more complicated and less effective. And the Senate Democrats lost their 60th
vote when Massachusetts Sen. Ted Kennedy died and was replaced by a Republican.
The only way for
the Democrats to pass the final version in the Senate was to accept the House
version unchanged.
The result is
that Obamacare is under attack from Republicans who can fairly claim that
nobody would listen to them when they sought compromise.
How different
government would be if the Democrats, without having to do so, had sought
compromise with at least some Republicans.
That’s the
way the Senate often worked before the GOP started using the filibuster for
almost any major piece of legislation.
If the filibuster
were abandoned, any piece of legislation adopted by only one party could easily
be repealed after an election that brought the other party to power. That could mean more effort to pass
bipartisan bills in the first place.
In other
words, the absence of a filibuster could be more likely to promote durable
political compromises than does today’s approach which virtually guarantees
unproductive partisanship.