The Maui News

Filibuster rule must stay

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The biggest question in Washington for the next two years isn’t about a single policy. It’s whether Democrats use their narrow Senate majority to kill the legislativ­e filibuster rule requiring 60 votes in order to ram a radical agenda into law with a mere 50 votes plus Vice President Kamala Harris.

Two Democrats — Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Joe Manchin of West Virginia — promised that they wouldn’t vote to do so. But progressiv­e and media pressure is building on the pair to renege on their pledges, as legislatio­n passed by the House piles up at the Senate. Democratic Senate leaders are vowing that they’ll find a way to evade the filibuster one way or another.

Republican­s can see these signs, and on Tuesday Minority Leader Mitch McConnell made clear what would happen if they do kill the filibuster. It won’t be pretty.

“Some Democratic Senators seem to imagine this would be a tidy trade-off, if they could just break the rules on a razor-thin majority. Sure, it might damage the institutio­n, but then nothing would stand between them and their entire agenda, a new era of fast-track policy-making,”î the GOP leader said.

Don’t count on it, McConnell continued: “So let me say this very clearly for all 99 of my colleagues. Nobody serving in this chamber can even begin, can even begin to imagine what a completely scorched-earth Senate would look like. None of us have served one minute in the Senate that was completely drained of comity and consent.”î

He then explained what that could mean in practice if Republican­s responded by withdrawin­g the unanimous consent required for the Senate to function: “I want our colleagues to imagine a world where every single task, every one of them, requires a physical quorum—which, by the way, the Vice President does not count in determinin­g a quorum.”î

That’s right. A quorum without unanimous consent is 51 senators, and there are only 50 Democrats. If Republican­s kept their nerve, Democrats couldn’t confirm nominees or vote on legislatio­n. Their agenda couldn’t move any more than if there were a filibuster.

Democrats shouldn’t underestim­ate how united Senate Republican­s would be, and how much GOP grass-roots support they’d have, if Democrats break the filibuster in a 50-50 Senate to federalize 50-state election laws, force mandatory unionizati­on on 27 states with right-to-work laws, add two new states to pack the Senate, or pass the Green New Deal.

McConnell pointed out the obvious that majorities aren’t permanent. Imagine what A GOP majority might pass? Mr. McConnell gave a few examples—defunding Planned Parenthood—but for political flavor think GOP Sens. Josh Hawley and Rand Paul unbound.

The filibuster rule exists to protect minority rights and require large majorities for significan­t reforms. If Democrats blow it up on the narrowest of majority votes, they will own the unintended consequenc­es.

Editorial from the Wall Street Journal

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