Explainer-Why does Joe Biden want to scrap the U.S. Senate's
'filibuster' rule?
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[January 12, 2022]
By Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe Biden
on Tuesday said the U.S. Senate should consider scrapping a longstanding
supermajority rule known as the "filibuster" if necessary to pass
voting-rights legislation that is opposed by Republicans.
Critics say the filibuster, which requires 60 of the 100 senators to
agree on most legislation, is an anti-democratic hurdle that prevents
Washington from addressing pressing problems.
Supporters say it forces lawmakers to seek consensus, serves as
important check on the party in power and ensures that major laws that
affect American life don't change radically with every election.
Once a rarity, the filibuster is now routinely invoked. In recent
months, Republicans have used it to block voting-rights bills and bring
the United States perilously close to a crippling debt default.
Democrats could use their razor-thin Senate majority to eliminate the
filibuster altogether. But centrist Senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten
Sinema oppose this move, saying that it will shatter the few bipartisan
bonds that remain and give Republicans free rein if they take a majority
in the Nov. 8 midterm elections.
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell has warned that his party would
use other tactics to bring the chamber to a halt if the filibuster is
eliminated.
WHAT IS THE FILIBUSTER?
Unlike the House of Representatives, the Senate was set up to allow for
unlimited debate. In the 19th century, lawmakers developed the
filibuster - a word derived from Dutch and Spanish terms for Caribbean
pirates - as a way to talk a bill to death.
Then-Democratic Senator Strom Thurmond set the record in 1957, when
spoke for 24 hours and 18 minutes to block a major civil rights bill.
Democratic Senator Chris Murphy spoke for nearly 15 hours in 2016 to
press for gun-control legislation and Republican Senator Ted Cruz spoke
for more than 21 hours in 2013 to protest President Barack Obama's
signature Affordable Care Act. None of those efforts were successful.
Senators agreed in 1917 that a vote by a two-thirds majority could end
debate on a given bill. That majority was reduced in 1975 to
three-fifths of the Senate, currently 60 senators.
Under current rules, senators don't need to talk to gum up the works --
they merely need to register their objection to initiate a filibuster.
Over the past 50 years, the number of filibusters has skyrocketed as
Democrats and Republicans have become more politically polarized. From
1969 to 1970 there were six votes to overcome a filibuster, the nearest
reliable proxy. There were 298 such votes in the 2019-2020 legislative
session.
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U.S. Democratic Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia on Tuesday
(January 11) rejected a push by others in his party to change the
chamber's rules on what's called the filibuster to allow a simple
majority vote in order to push through a voting-rights package.
WHY IS THIS A PROBLEM FOR DEMOCRATS?
Democrats control 50 seats in the Senate, which allows them to eke
together a majority with Vice President Kamala Harris casting the
tie-breaking 51st vote when needed. They can't overcome filibusters
unless at least 10 Republicans vote with them.
Democrats were able to bypass the filibuster to pass Biden's $1.9
trillion COVID-19 stimulus plan using a special process known as
"reconciliation" that only requires a simple majority for certain
budget bills. But that process is subject to complex limitations and
cannot be used regularly.
Republicans have blocked many other Democratic priorities, though 19
of them did vote for a $1 trillion package to revamp the nation's
roads, bridges and other infrastructure.
CAN THE FILIBUSTER BE CHANGED?
There have already been changes.
In 2013, Democrats removed the 60-vote threshold for voting on most
nominees for administration jobs, apart from the Supreme Court,
allowing them to advance on a simple majority vote.
In 2017, Republicans did the same thing for Supreme Court nominees.
Both the 2013 and 2017 Senate rule changes were made by simple
majority votes.
Some Democrats have called for eliminating the filibuster entirely,
but they lack the 50 votes needed to take that step.
Democrats plan to vote sometime over the next week to scale back the
filibuster so it would not apply to voting-related legislation. But
it's not clear whether they have the votes for this either; Manchin
said last week that he would prefer to get some Republican buy-in
for that change.
On Sunday he said he might support making the tactic more "painful"
by requiring senators to keep talking on the Senate floor.
Biden, who spent 36 years in the Senate, long supported the
filibuster but has grown more open to changing it as Republicans
have blocked several of his major initiatives over the past year.
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan, additional reporting by Susan Cornwell;
Editing by Scott Malone and Alistair Bell)
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