Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Democrats need 60 votes to codify Roe

- D.L. Davis

A leaked draft opinion that indicated the U.S. Supreme Court could soon strike down the landmark Roe v. Wade decision establishi­ng the right to abortion has sent shock waves through American political, religious and societal circles.

If the 1973 ruling is overturned, in Wisconsin an 1849 ban on nearly all abortions would go back into effect. Nationally, with Democrats controllin­g Congress and the White House, there has been a push to codify the right to an abortion in federal law.

That’s not as easy as it may sound. And that gets at a vexing issue that we wanted to use this fact-check to help address: Where does the Senate fit in a political world in which most everything else – including the Supreme Court – is majority rules?

“Because the U.S. Senate is a minority institutio­n, meaning you don’t have to get the most votes and still control the chamber, we need to have more than a majority of Democrats in control to codify Roe v. Wade,” state Sen. Kelda Roys, D-Madison, said May 8 on “Capital City Sunday.”

On Wednesday, Senate Democrats failed to advance legislatio­n intended to protect abortion access nationwide even if the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade. On a vote of 51 to 49, Democrats fell short of the 60 votes they would have needed

When we asked Roys for backup, she – unsurprisi­ngly – pointed to the Senate rules, specifically the 60-vote requiremen­t for “cloture,” or what is needed to end debate for a (majority rules) vote on the underlying bill.

“Without 60 votes, a minority of senators can filibuster any proposal to which they object,” Roys told us.

To be sure, there are some exceptions – such as budget reconcilia­tion bills – to this rule, but those exceptions provide limited opportunit­ies and, in any case, would not apply to a proposed bill codifying abortion rights.

Republican­s say the filibuster protects the rights of the minority party.

In recent years, the focus on eliminatin­g the filibuster has centered on court nominees. The filibuster used to apply to all judicial nominees, but Democrats eliminated it for many nomination­s under President Barack Obama and Republican­s eliminated it for Supreme Court nominees under President Donald Trump.

Right now, the chamber is evenly divided, but Democrats have the tiebreaker vote in the form of Vice President Kamala Harris.

Roys said the situation is compounded by the U.S. Senate’s “unbalanced representa­tion.”

“Right now, the 50 Democratic senators represent 41 million more Americans than the 50 Republican­s,” Roys said, a statement confirmed by a Nov. 6, 2020, Vox report.

This is because Democrats typically garner more votes in high-population states, while Republican­s fare better in states with lower population­s. But each state gets two U.S. senators regardless of population.

For example, Wyoming, with a population close to 600,000 and called the most Republican state in the U.S., has two senators; while California, with a population close to 39 million and considered to be a Democratic stronghold, also has two senators.

Expert weighs in

Norman J. Ornstein, an emeritus scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a Washington, D.C., conservati­ve think tank, said the Senate is a minority institutio­n in two ways.

“Because each state, regardless of population, gets two senators, a tiny majority of the population can determine the outcomes,” Ornstein said in an email to PolitiFact Wisconsin. “To give a contempora­ry example, we are almost at the point where 70 percent of Americans live in just 15 states. Meaning 30 percent of Americans will elect 70 senators.”

Ornstein, who serves as an election analyst for CBS News and writes a weekly column for Roll Call, also explained that the filibuster rule means that “41 senators can block action on any bill except for those that are protected by rules like reconcilia­tion.”

According to the U.S. Senate reference website, using the filibuster to delay debate or block legislatio­n has a long history.

“The term filibuster, from a Dutch word meaning ‘pirate,’ became popular in the United States during the 1850s when it was applied to efforts to hold the Senate floor in order to prevent action on a bill,” the Senate site says.

In 1917, according to the website, in response to pressure from President Woodrow Wilson and the crisis of the First World War, the Senate adopted a new rule establishi­ng a procedure known as “cloture.” This allowed the Senate to end debate with a two-thirds vote (67 votes in a 100-member Senate). In 1975, the Senate reduced the number of votes required from two-thirds to three-fifths (60).

“So even if Democrats had 50 or even 59 votes to codify Roe v. Wade, so long as the filibuster rule remains as is, unified Republican opposition can block the bill,” Ornstein said. “Right now, all Republican­s are opposed. The Democrats could find a way to alter the rule, as was done for confirmations, by majority, but right now at least two of their own won’t agree.”

Our ruling

Roys said due to U.S. Senate rules, Democrats need “more than a majority ... to codify Roe vs. Wade.”

Roys was referring to Senate rules which require 60 votes for ending debate prior to a vote on a bill, which means it’s possible to have a party with control – in this case the Democrats – but without the ability to move measures forward that don’t have support from the other.

We rate Roys’ claim True.

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