Gordon L. Weil
Note: This is the
second of a series on how to reform the federal government without amending the
Constitution.
A single person now prevents Congress from taking almost any
action, including even to consider a bill or a nomination.
President Trump? Another
constitutional leader? No, a mere party
official – the Majority Leader in the U.S. Senate – has the absolute authority
to set the national agenda. If he
(there's never been a woman) decides to keep any matter from coming before the
Senate, it's dead.
By himself, the Majority Leader can kill any measure, even proposed
by the president, especially when the president leads the opposing party.
These days, Kentucky GOP Sen. Mitch McConnell wields that
power, given to him by the Republican Senate majority.
When voters elect Republican senators, including
Maine's Susan Collins, who in turn choose him, they indirectly pick the most
powerful person in the federal legislative process.
Can anything be done about this dictatorial system, not
foreseen when the Constitution was drafted?
Of course, it could.
If senators were bold enough to strip the majority leader of power, a
Senate majority could set its own agenda.
But that would give rise to an equally serious problem. Each state, no matter its population, has two
votes in the Senate. It would be
mathematically possible for senators representing states with as little at 18
percent of the total U.S. population to control the Senate and set its agenda.
Even without that extreme case, representatives of a
minority of the people could always be in charge of the Senate. In fact, simple majority votes are often decided
by senators representing less than half of the population.
Originally, the House was supposed to represent the people
and the Senate was supposed to represent states. But the Constitution was amended, replacing state
legislatures' election of senators by popular vote. At that point, a method had to be found to
prevent minority rule.
"Cloture" was invented to require an extra-large
majority to end debate before final Senate votes. It virtually assures that the supermajority of
60 out of the 100 senators will represent a popular majority. And it won't allow the majority party to steamroller
the minority party, insurance against their roles being reversed later.
That works, so long as the majority leader wants it. McConnell decided he wanted to ensure
conservatives got their court picks. Confirming
Supreme Court justices was changed to require only a simple majority. Confirmation votes became completely political
and increased the possibility of minority rule.
Previously, McConnell had prevented the Senate from even
considering a Supreme Court nominee of President Obama. So, he used his considerable power to prevent
consideration of one court nominee while allowing two others to be confirmed
for the first time by simple majorities. Opposition Democrats shrugged off his actions,
accepting the system.
Just this week, McConnell blocked election security bills,
including one that would have required backup paper ballots to blunt computer vote
tampering.
The power exercised by the majority leader is far removed
from democracy and open government in America.
Does he have too much power for one person in this country?
If the Senate is to take control from McConnell or any
majority leader, it must find a new, fair and democratic voting system. Because the Constitution requires only a simple
majority, the way to control runaway minority government remains overcoming a
higher procedural hurdle before that vote.
The solution can be found in reforming the cloture rule. That can be done in a way that is both
consistent with the democratic spirit of the Constitution and assures true
majority rule.
The system that McConnell has installed for confirming
federal judges should apply to all votes.
Debate should be ended by a simple majority – but with one essential
condition.
While each issue would have to pass a cloture vote by simple
majority, that majority would have to include senators representing a majority
of the population, according to the latest census. When the two senators from the same state
disagree, its population should be divided with half attributed to each.
This fair, new rule would be quite similar to the
traditional rule. And, just as the
cloture rule has been adopted and amended over time, this revised procedure
could be included in Senate rules by a simple majority of the Senate, when it
adopts them every two years.
This system is called qualified majority voting. It is used today in the European Union, and it
works. Reforming Senate voting and
toppling control by a single person could be easily done. One-person rule in the American government would
end.
Qualified majority voting would greatly increase the
likelihood that votes would depend on support by members of both parties. Using it in the Senate would force compromise
and get decisions made.