Chicago Sun-Times

BIDEN WOULD BACK FILIBUSTER EXCEPTION FOR ABORTION ACCESS

- BY CHRIS MEGERIAN

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden said Thursday that he would support an exception to the Senate filibuster to protect abortion access, a shift that comes as Democrats coalesce around an election-year message intended to rally voters who are outraged or deflated by the Supreme Court decision overturnin­g Roe v. Wade.

Although Democrats already control the Senate by the narrowest of margins, there isn’t enough support within their caucus to change the filibuster rule, which allows any member to block legislatio­n unless it receives 60 votes. But Biden’s statement was the latest indication that, if the party picks up a few more seats in the midterm elections in November, Democrats could seize the opportunit­y to pass legislatio­n creating a nationwide right to abortion.

“If the filibuster gets in the way, it’s like voting rights,” Biden said, referencin­g the rare other issue where he supports sidesteppi­ng the rule. Speaking during a news conference in Madrid, where he was attending a NATO summit, the Democratic president said there should be an “exception to the filibuster for this action to deal with the Supreme Court decision.”

Democrats hold 50 seats in the 100-person Senate, with Vice President Kamala Harris able to break ties when she presides over the Senate. It would take 51 votes to change the filibuster rule.

But at least two Democratic senators, Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, don’t support changing the filibuster rule. They also blocked an effort to protect voting rights earlier this year, dealing a defeat to Biden and Democrats who said the legislatio­n was vital to protecting democracy.

Harris said earlier this week that “the votes don’t exist” for changing the filibuster now.

“Why are we talking about hypothetic­als?” she told NPR.

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., who was also attending the NATO summit in Madrid, said Thursday that it’s not practical to expect “massive institutio­nal change” because of opposition to filibuster changes within the caucus.

“This is not the political environmen­t to be looking for that,” he said.

With Biden unpopular and inflation continuing to rise, Republican­s are poised to make gains in the November elections and perhaps retake control of Congress. Democrats have been grasping for a message that would change the course of the election, and they’ve increasing­ly emphasized to voters that they need at least two more seats in the Senate to make progress on key issues.

During a Los Angeles fundraiser last month, Biden said “we need two more senators” because some members of the caucus are “slowing up what we’re able to do.”

 ?? MANDEL NGAN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? President Joe Biden lifts grandson Beau, the son of Hunter Biden, as his granddaugh­ter Maisy watches, after the president returned to Washington on Thursday.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES President Joe Biden lifts grandson Beau, the son of Hunter Biden, as his granddaugh­ter Maisy watches, after the president returned to Washington on Thursday.

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