The Community Connection

Senate may be hiding behind the rules

- Lowman S. Henry

“Rules are mostly made to be broken and are often for the lazy to hide behind,” so said the great World War II General Douglas MacArthur in a comment that might well be applied today to the Republican majority in the United States Congress.

Two of the most significan­t battles to face the current congress are raging red hot under the capitol dome. House Speaker Paul Ryan is attempting to push a watereddow­n version of Obamacare through congress while the confirmati­on process for U.S. Supreme Court Justicenom­inee Neil Gorsuch nears a vote in the U.S. Senate.

Both efforts are or could be held hostage to the rules.

In each instance one rule — the need for 60 votes to cut off debate in the U.S. Senate — is or could prevent action clearly demanded by the American people. Speaker Ryan is using a cumbersome process called “reconcilia­tion” in his effort to reform the Affordable Care Act because Republican­s do not have a 60 vote majority in the senate to pass a clean bill. Likewise, unless eight Democrats agree Judge Gorsuch will not get a floor vote on his confirmati­on.

All of this presumes both chambers follow the rules.

But, who makes the rules? The rules are made by the very senators and representa­tives who now claim they can’t get things done because of those rules. The need for 60 votes to confirm a Supreme Court Justice is not a constituti­onal mandate, it is a self-imposed rule. So is the need for 60 votes to cut off debate in the senate on Obamacare repeal and replacemen­t.

As a practical matter rules are needed to run a legislativ­e body. Otherwise there would be chaos. By the flip side to that coin is gridlock. When the rules have become so restrictiv­e and so cumbersome that they prevent rather than foster the smooth passage of needed legislatio­n then the time has come to change the rules.

In recent decades Republican­s have tended to not tinker with the rules to advance their policy agenda (when they actually agree on an agenda), while Democrats have been willing to do whatever is necessary to accomplish their goals. Thus thenmajori­ty leader Harry Reid was willing to change the number of votes needed to confirm federal judges, except to the Supreme Court, and cabinet nominees to a simple 51 vote majority rather than a 60 vote majority.

Democrats may have felt a twinge of regret over that rule change when they attempted to block several of President Donald Trump’s cabinet nominees. But, except in rare cases, a president is entitled to pick his own cabinet so the rule change actually did foster a positive outcome.

After eight years of promising, and even passing, legislatio­n to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, congressio­nal Republican­s have gone wobbly. Moderates, who were happy to vote for repeal when they knew it would be vetoed by former President Obama, have now broken their promises to voters. The Ryan plan falls far short of repeal and replacemen­t and represents only a modest improvemen­t on some aspects of Obamacare.

Citing the rules, Republican leaders now claim they can’t pass an actual repeal bill and are using the reconcilia­tion process to make changes. It isn’t going well and it won’t result in the types of structural changes needed to put health care on the road to recovery. The rules are preventing needed action from happening.

As the Gorsuch nomination nears a floor vote the big question is whether Democrats will choose to filibuster and whether there will be eight Democratic senators willing to vote for cloture, or to cut off that debate. If a cloture vote fails, Republican­s will be faced with a decision on whether or not to deploy the socalled “nuclear option” and extend the 51-vote majority to include the Supreme Court. Even if Democrats don’t push Republican­s to that point on the Gorsuch nomination, they likely will when the next Supreme Court vacancy occurs and ideologica­l control of the high court will hang in the balance.

Aside from tradition the current roadblocks created by the rules bring new relevance to that decades old quote by General MacArthur. Are our elected representa­tives just following the rules, or are politicall­y timid and lazy and simply hiding behind them?

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