Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

McConnell relents on deal for Senate power-sharing

- MIKE DEBONIS

WASHINGTON — Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on Monday night signaled that he would step back from an ultimatum over Senate rules, which had sparked a partisan showdown that threatened to obstruct President Joe Biden’s early legislativ­e agenda.

McConnell, R-Ky., said in a statement that he was ready to move forward with a power-sharing accord with Democrats on how to operate the evenly divided Senate, defusing a clash over the minority’s rights to block partisan legislatio­n.

At issue for McConnell was the fate of the filibuster, the Senate rule that acts as a 60-vote supermajor­ity requiremen­t for most legislatio­n. With many Democrats calling for its eliminatio­n as their party takes control of the House, Senate and White House, McConnell had sought assurances from the new Senate majority leader, DemocratCh­arles Schumer of New York, that the filibuster would be preserved.

Democrats bristled at the request, demanding that McConnell agree to a power-sharing arrangemen­t that followed the model used during the last 50-50 Senate, in 2001 — which would give the party with the vice presidency and its tie-breaking powers control of the floor agenda.

Without the deal, Senate committees were frozen in place from the previous Congress, in which Republican­s held a majority. That created the unusual circumstan­ce in which Democrats had control of the floor while GOP chairmen remained in charge of most committees.

McConnell on Monday said he was prepared to move forward on a deal “modeled on that [2001] precedent” after two Democratic senators reiterated their opposition to eliminatin­g the filibuster.

“They agree with President Biden’s and my view that no Senate majority should destroy the right of future minorities of both parties to help shape legislatio­n,” he said.

Schumer on Monday reiterated his determinat­ion not to bow to the longtime Republican leader’s demands.

“He is not majority leader. He is the minority leader, and he is not going to get his way,” Schumer said in an MSNBC interview Monday. “We are not going to do what he wants. … We hope in the next day or two he will come to his senses and take our offer.”

Justin Goodman, a spokesman for Schumer, said Democrats were “glad Sen. McConnell threw in the towel and gave up on his ridiculous demand.”

“We look forward to organizing the Senate under Democratic control and start getting big, bold things done for the American people,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States