Santa Fe New Mexican

GOP relents in filibuster spat as Dems take control

- By Carl Hulse

WASHINGTON — Sen. Mitch McConnell on Monday dropped his demand that the new Democratic Senate majority promise to preserve the filibuster — which Republican­s could use to obstruct President Joe Biden’s agenda — ending an impasse that had prevented Democrats from assuming full power even after their election wins.

In his negotiatio­ns with Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, the new majority leader, McConnell, R-Ky., had refused to agree to a plan for organizing the chamber without a pledge from Democrats to protect the filibuster, a condition that Schumer had rejected.

But late Monday, as the stalemate persisted, McConnell found a way out by pointing to statements by two centrist Democrats, Sens. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, that said they opposed getting rid of the procedural tool — a position they had held for months — as enough of a guarantee to move forward without a formal promise from Schumer.

“With these assurances, I look forward to moving ahead with a power-sharing agreement modeled on that precedent,” McConnell said in a statement.

Democrats had been anticipati­ng a capitulati­on by McConnell and said they believed he had overreache­d in the negotiatio­n. “We’re glad Sen. McConnell threw in the towel and gave up on his ridiculous demand,” said Justin Goodman, a spokespers­on for Schumer. “We look forward to organizing the Senate under Democratic control and start getting big, bold things done for the American people.”

But as in past fights over the filibuster, the outcome is likely to be only a temporary solution. As they press forward on Biden’s agenda, Democrats will come under mounting pressure from activists to jettison the rule, which effectivel­y requires 60 votes to advance any measure, should Republican­s use it regularly to stall or stop the administra­tion’s priorities.

Even some lawmakers who have backed the filibuster strongly said they could change their minds if Republican­s engaged in constant obstructio­n.

“I feel pretty damn strongly, but I will also tell you this: I am here to get things done,” said Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont. “If all that happens is filibuster after filibuster, roadblock after roadblock, then my opinion may change.”

Tester is among those key to the rapidly developing showdown over the fate of the filibuster, the signature feature of the Senate — a once rarely employed weapon now used routinely to stall action in the gridlocked institutio­n — that holds heavy consequenc­es for Biden’s presidency.

McConnell’s demand for a preemptive surrender on the filibuster had infuriated Democrats who regarded it as evidence that the Republican leader intends to obstruct Biden’s proposals on pandemic relief, immigratio­n, climate change, health care and more.

“Mitch McConnell will not dictate to the Senate what we should do and how we should proceed,” Schumer said Sunday. “McConnell is no longer the majority leader.”

The stalemate created a bizarre situation in which most Senate committees were frozen under Republican control and new senators could not be seated on the panels even though Democrats now command the Senate majority.

Beyond the immediate logistical effects, the feud reflected a challengin­g dynamic in the 50-50 Senate for Biden. By holding out against Democrats eager to take charge, McConnell was exercising what leverage he had. But he also foreshadow­ed an eventual clash in the chamber that might otherwise have taken months to unfold over how aggressive Democrats should be in seeking to accomplish Biden’s top priorities.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Republican Mitch McConnell of Kentucky walks off the Senate floor at the U.S. Capitol as the minority leader after the new Democratic senators were sworn in Wednesday.
ERIN SCHAFF/NEW YORK TIMES Republican Mitch McConnell of Kentucky walks off the Senate floor at the U.S. Capitol as the minority leader after the new Democratic senators were sworn in Wednesday.

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