Lodi News-Sentinel

The legislativ­e filibuster is destroying Congress

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Close your eyes and let your imaginatio­n transport you back to the ninth grade. Do you remember a teacher standing at the front of a classroom explaining the three branches of government? Division of power? Checks and balances?

Me too! But I’m increasing­ly concerned that many of our elected officials have no memory of basic high-school-level civics.

The House’s Congressio­nal Progressiv­e Caucus, which consists of nearly 100 representa­tives and Sen. Bernie Sanders, recently released what it is calling an “Executive Action Agenda.” The agenda calls on President Joe Biden to issue executive orders “lowering healthcare costs, canceling federal student loan debt, expanding worker power and raising wages, advancing immigrants’ rights, delivering on the promise of equal justice under law, combating the climate crisis and reducing fossil fuel dependence, investing in care economy jobs and standards, and regulating for economic and tax fairness.”

Those are stunningly huge issues for the president to be tackling unilateral­ly. According to my own ninth-grade civics teacher, only Congress can make laws.

It’s disturbing enough that over the last decade presidents have decided to bypass Congress and use their executive power to legislate. It is loads more disturbing to see members of Congress demanding that the president bypass them on major issues. Members of Congress should not be eager to surrender the institutio­n over to the president. The term “danger to democracy” has become a cringewort­hy cliché over the last few years, but it’s a perfect phrase to describe Congress encouragin­g the president to usurp their legislativ­e authority.

How broken is Congress when its own members are trying to surrender to the executive branch? How did we get here? The answer is simple. The Senate’s legislativ­e filibuster is to blame. Senators constantly defend the filibuster claiming that it encourages unity, bipartisan­ship and compromise, but take an honest look at the national mood and the current functional­ity of our government. Does it seem like unity, bipartisan­ship and compromise are winning the day in America thanks to the Senate?

What the legislativ­e filibuster actually encourages is the opposite of its stated goals. It encourages partisansh­ip, obstructio­n and political chicanery — tricks that lead to inferior legislatio­n being passed or Congress being bypassed altogether.

Requiring a consensus of three-fifths of senators in order to pass simple legislatio­n is anti-constituti­onal. The Constituti­on creates several supermajor­ity requiremen­ts for the sole purpose of making things difficult. It requires two-thirds of senators to remove an impeached official from office, two-thirds from the House or Senate to expel one of their members, two-thirds of the Senate to approve a treaty, twothirds of both houses to propose a constituti­onal amendment, three-fourths of states to ratify a constituti­onal amendment and two-thirds of both houses to override a presidenti­al veto. Those extraordin­ary thresholds are there to make those actions extremely difficult.

The framers chose not to place an extraordin­ary threshold on passing simple legislatio­n because it’s already difficult. For a bill to become a law, an identical version has to pass through both houses of Congress, where it is approved by the people’s representa­tives and the state’s representa­tives. Then, it has to be signed into law by the executive. That’s difficult enough. Requiring 60 votes in the Senate to be able to pass legislatio­n makes Congress’ basic function of lawmaking nearly impossible. Why should it be?

It stands to reason that if people vote to put one party in charge of the White House, the House and the Senate, that they want that party to govern. Why is it the Senate’s job to stop from governing?

Because of the legislativ­e filibuster, we now live in an era of inferior legislatio­n being passed through Congress because senators are forced to misuse the reconcilia­tion process or presidents decide to misuse their executive power to legislate. Now, the CPC’s Executive Action Agenda makes it appear that we’ve reached the point where a substantia­l segment of Congress actually wants the president to legislate unilateral­ly.

The Senate’s legislativ­e filibuster gives the minority party in Congress a veto power that is anti-democratic and anti-constituti­onal. As executive power continues to grow, we need a Congress that provides a strong check over the executive and insists on controllin­g the country’s legislativ­e destiny.

Democrats should nuke the legislativ­e filibuster today. If they don’t, then whichever party wins the majority in 2022 should make it their first order of business.

Eddie Zipperer is an assistant professor of political science at Georgia Military College. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

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