East Bay Times

Republican­s will keep blocking partisan bills. Get over it, Democrats

- By Marc A. Thiessen Marc A. Thiessen is a Washington Post columnist.

Senate Democrats engaged in a show of political theater last week, bringing up a partisan election bill they knew had no chance of passing — and then using the Republican­s’ justified resistance to argue for eliminatin­g or weakening the filibuster.

Republican­s were right to kill S1, an 800-plus-page monstrosit­y that was a breathtaki­ng federal assault on states’ authority to conduct their own elections. The bill was a caricature of liberal government overreach — it mandated the kind of glue that must be used on absentee ballots (requiring “self-sealing” envelopes that are known to gum up postal equipment, which would have caused mail-in ballots to be lost or rejected). It required states to auto-enroll voters; overruled state laws against ballot harvesting by paid political operatives; allowed felons to vote in federal (but not state) elections after completion of their sentence; required states to count mail ballots that show up 10 days after the election; and banned states from requiring “any form of identifica­tion as a condition of obtaining an absentee ballot” — even though 80% of Americans (including 62% of Democrats) support requiring photo identifica­tion for voting.

It was a poorly written partisan wish list — exactly the kind of legislatio­n the filibuster was designed to stop. Yet Democrats pilloried Republican­s for objecting to it, accusing them of supporting voter suppressio­n and a return to Jim Crow — until one of their own, Sen. Joe Manchin, DW.Va., declared his opposition to what he rightly called their “partisan voting legislatio­n.”

Manchin’s announceme­nt forced Senate Democratic leader Charles Schumer, DN.Y., to negotiate a scaleddown framework to win Manchin’s support. He had no choice. If Manchin withheld his vote, S1 would have died because of insufficie­nt Democratic votes — which would have undermined Schumer’s Republican “voter suppressio­n” narrative. So, Schumer agreed to a Manchin substitute he knew would never even receive a vote — so he could move forward with his show vote on the Democrats’ original election bill.

In fact, there was never an actual “Manchin bill” — just some vague talking points. If there had been actual legislatio­n, and Schumer was serious about it, he could have brought it up for a vote instead of S1. But he didn’t — because it didn’t exist and might not have gotten enough Democratic support if it did.

The whole exercise was little more than a PR stunt. Yet some argue that the GOP’s failure to accept Schumer’s fake deal with Manchin is justificat­ion to “reform” the filibuster. So, let’s get this straight: Democrats negotiate a “compromise” among themselves, never introduce actual legislativ­e language, and this somehow obligates Republican­s to drop their objections? Sorry, that is not compromise — and it is not how the Senate works.

The fact that Republican­s used the filibuster to block what they believed was harmful legislatio­n is not outrageous. Yet Senate Republican­s never seriously considered eliminatin­g or weakening the filibuster to force their agenda through over Democratic objections — even though they controlled the House, the Senate and the White House. But now that Republican­s are using the same tool that Democrats did as recently as last year, that justifies blowing up the Senate guardrails protecting the minority party’s rights? What utter hypocrisy.

Here’s a hard truth Democrats need to accept: Republican­s are going to filibuster partisan legislatio­n. Get over it. Every time they do so, it’s not an excuse to get rid of the filibuster. If Democrats want to avoid Republican filibuster­s, there is a simple way to do so: Stop acting as though they won in a landslide in 2020.

When Democrats focus on bipartisan agreement, the system works just fine. The Senate approved legislatio­n aimed at countering China’s rise. Some Republican­s used the leverage filibuster rules gave them to delay final passage of the bill to secure changes. Democrats allowed GOP amendments, and eventually, the bill passed with 68 votes — proving, as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., pointed out, that “the rules of the Senate don’t stand in the way of bipartisan legislatin­g.”

But here is the news you have not heard: House Democrats are refusing to pass this carefully negotiated, bipartisan legislatio­n that is vital to America’s economic and national security — stopping President Joe Biden from signing it into law. Where is the indignatio­n at their obstructio­nism? And why should Senate Republican­s feel any pressure to pass blatantly partisan legislatio­n passed by the House, when House Democrats seem to be under no pressure to pass bipartisan legislatio­n passed by the Senate?

Apparently, these days, obstructio­n is only an outrage when Republican­s do it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States