New York Post

The Undying Myth Of GOP ‘Obstructio­n’

- DAVID HARSANYI Twitter: @DavidHarsa­nyi

THE media have spent the Joe Biden presidency thus far pressuring moderate Democrats to join the left’s efforts to destroy the filibuster. One way they do this is by cobbling together revisionis­t histories that cast Republican­s as uniquely obstructio­nist and undemocrat­ic. CNN’s White House correspond­ent John Harwood lays out that history in broad strokes: “For Clinton’s 1993 deficit-reduction plan: 0 Republican votes. For Obama’s 2010 national health-care plan: 0 Republican votes. For Biden’s 2021 COVID-relief plan: 0 Republican votes. The modern GOP response to Democratic governance is total resistance.”

What he fails to mention is that under President Bill Clinton, the GOP, often in significan­t numbers, voted for a slew of big policy reforms: 16 Senate Republican­s voted for the Family and Medical Leave Act; a telecommun­ications reform passed 81-18; the welfare-reform compromise passed 78-21; the Brady Act gun-control bill only passed because of Republican support; the North American Free Trade Agreement passed 73-26; Biden’s crime bill passed 95-4.

In those days, parties would bend over backward to compromise. This was often the case during the George W. Bush years, as well. The Patriot Act was a bipartisan bill. No Child Left Behind, cowritten by liberal “lion” Sen. Ted Kennedy, passed 87-10.

It was the passage of the Affordable Care Act in 2010 that frayed the political order in ways from which we haven’t recovered. For the first time in contempora­ry history, a political party unilateral­ly crammed through a national reform without any buy-in from half the nation.

Harwood is also right that Biden’s 2021 COVID-relief plan garnered zero GOP votes. Yet he again seems to have forgotten that

Democrats filibuster­ed and blocked Republican coronaviru­s-relief bills dozens of times. You know how many Democrats voted for President Donald Trump’s taxreform bill? Zero. Democrats filibuster­ed Sen. Tim Scott’s criminalju­stice reform. They used the filibuster to block funding of Trump’s border wall. They blocked Sen. Ben Sasse’s Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act.

Perhaps Harwood is unaware that Trump faced more procedural delays in his four years in office than any president in history — more than all other presidents in history combined, in fact. According to a Politico analysis, Clinton faced 15 filibuster­s by the Senate in his two terms. Obama faced 175 in eight years. Trump faced more than 300 in only four.

Many liberals attempt to circumvent this prickly reality by prewriting history: “Is there any doubt that the GOP would end the filibuster for good — in a heartbeat — if it served their purposes?” asked ABC News senior national correspond­ent Terry Moran. Indeed, there is great doubt, considerin­g that Trump had publicly pressed Sen. Mitch McConnell to blow up the legislativ­e filibuster on numerous occasions, and the then-Senate majority leader refused.

Let’s not forget either that Democrats blew up the judicial filibuster. And when it backfired, and Republican­s followed the new rules Sen. Harry Reid had instituted, Democrats tried to redefine judicial confirmati­ons as “packing the court.” There is a perpetuall­y evolving set of rules, and the constant is that these rules must benefit Democrats.

It was also Democrats, led by Biden, who blew up the norms of decorum and bipartisan­ship in the Supreme Court confirmati­on hearings when they politicize­d the

‘ Democrats filibuster­ed . . . Republican coronaviru­s-relief bills dozens of times.’

nomination­s of Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas. Only three Democrats voted to confirm Neil Gorsuch. Only one Democrat — Sen. Joe Manchin — voted to confirm Brett Kavanaugh after Democrats smeared him with their unsubstant­iated charges. And not one Democrat voted for Amy Coney Barrett. By contrast, five Republican­s voted to confirm Elena Kagan, and nine voted to confirm Sonia Sotomayor.

There’s really nothing wrong with inaction in Congress if the country is fundamenta­lly at odds over policy. The system is built to stop partisan excesses. In that regard, the filibuster has been one of the most effective tools in preserving some semblance of proper constituti­onal governance.

Now, political parties might be right or wrong, but only one clamors to blow up the rules every time it doesn’t get its way. But a sense of moral and political self-righteousn­ess doesn’t entitle liberals to rewrite history.

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