Las Vegas Review-Journal

Schumer OK on ending filibuster

Minority leader open to killing procedural rule for legislatio­n

- By Elana Schor The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer opened the door on Tuesday to ending the procedural rule that requires 60 votes to steer most bills through the chamber if Democrats take the Senate and White House in 2020.

Schumer told reporters that “nothing’s off the table” if Democrats defeat President Donald Trump and take back the Senate in 2020. However, the New York Democrat cautioned that before removing the filibuster for legislatio­n, “our first step is to get back the majority” of the Senate, where Democrats currently control 47 votes to the GOP’S 53 votes.

It wasn’t the first time Schumer has signaled that he would be open to ending the filibuster, which allows 41 senators to block approval of legislatio­n if they vote as a bloc. But his renewed openness to the move is a victory for liberal activists who have elevated the filibuster in the party’s t2020 presidenti­al primary.

Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren has said she would eliminate the filibuster if elected president, urging fellow Democrats to “be bold and clear.” Other top Democrats, including California Sen. Kamala Harris and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, have expressed openness to curtailing it.

However, even if Democrats were to take back the Senate and the White House next year, securing the votes necessary to end the filibuster won’t be a simple task. One of the Senate’s most centrist Democrats, West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, was surprised that Schumer would decline to rule out eliminatin­g the filibuster.

The Senate’s ability to function as intended by “our Founding Fathers,” Manchin said in an interview, relies on giving the minority “the ability to stop crazy stuff ” from passing.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., has previously spurned entreaties to end the filibuster for legislatio­n, including from Trump himself.

However, he did eliminate the 60-vote threshold required to confirm Supreme Court nominees in 2017, following a move in 2013 by then-senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-nev., to end the requiremen­t for other executive branch and judicial nominees.

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Chuck Schumer

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