Posted on 09/09/2014 4:19:57 PM PDT by Kaslin
The Politico story quoted extensively below is a gem, on several levels. By way of background, Senate Democrats are hopping mad because Republicans have complicated their game plan to stage a series of quixotic, poll-tested, pre-election show votes. The GOP's specific sin? Agreeing to proceed to a debate on the first proposed measure -- which just happens to be a Constitutional Amendment imposing unprecedented new federal limits on political speech:
Several Senate Republicans joined Democrats on Monday to advance a constitutional amendment that would give Congress and the states greater power to regulate campaign finance. But the bipartisanship ends there. Many of the Republicans only voted for the bill to foul up Democrats pre-election messaging schedule, freezing precious Senate floor time for a measure that ultimately has no chance of securing the two-thirds support necessary in both the House and Senate to amend the Constitution. The legislation needed 60 votes to advance and Democrats took a cynical view of the 79-18 tally. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said the GOPs tactic was simply to stall because it would eat up limited floor time that Democrats are eyeing for votes aimed at encouraging gender pay equity and raising the minimum wage.
Democrats were counting on Republicans to vote against cloture -- ie, "filibuster" -- the doomed, speech-squelching amendment right from the get-go. The script was pre-written: These Republicans are obstructing votes in order to protect millionaires and billionaires who are poising our politics with filthy outside money! To that end, within minutes of the upper chamber being gaveled back into session after the August recess, Harry Reid resumed his deranged muttering about the sinister Koch brothers. (Always absent in these harangues is any mention of the vast network of moneyed liberal donors, who regularly outspend their conservative counterparts). But before that message machine got revved up, a significant number of GOP members decided to play along. They voted to proceed to a debate, which will eat up many hours of floor time, and will culminate in a failed vote on the amendment, which requires 67 votes to pass. Self-described Socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders is aggrieved by the cynicism of it all:
They know were getting out of here fairly shortly and they want to prevent discussion on other very important issues, said Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.). I would love to be proven wrong. But if the end of this week, we end up getting 67 votes, you can tell me I was too cynical. ... Democrats argument would be made simpler if the GOP simply rejected the constitutional amendment on the first vote, rather than opening debate on it. But now the amendment will be on the Senate floor for several days — allowing perhaps the last substantive debate of the election season...
The proposal [Democrats] want to consider would empower incumbent politicians to write the rules on who gets to speak and who doesnt. And while no one likes to be criticized, the way for Senate Democrats to avoid it is to make better arguments, or even better, to come up with better ideas — not shut up their constituents. Not surprisingly, a proposal as bad as the one Senate Democrats are pushing wont even come close to garnering the votes it would need to pass. But to many Democrats, thats just the point. They want this proposal to fail because they think that somehow would help them on Election Day — they think it will help drive to the polls more left-wing voters who dont like having to defend their ideas...A more sensible approach would be for the Democrats who run the Senate to take up the slew of job-creation bills the Republican-controlled House already has passed, some with overwhelming bipartisan support. But Senate Democrats prefer to spend their time on bizarre sideshows like trying to take an eraser to the First Amendment.
I'll leave you with a clever and related question posed by Charles Krauthammer: If, for the purposes of campaign finance "reform" and birth control mandates, corporations are not people -- as Democrats insist -- how can they demand that corporations exhibit "patriotism"?
Huh?
since when can congress amend the Constitution? perhaps they mean pass it to offer it to the states to ratify. 2/3s of the states have to ratify it. that hasn’t happen with the era in spite of many unconstitutional extensions.
Three-fourths of the states have to ratify it, not two-thirds.
Similar to what happened in Texas with our TOTALLY RIPPED Austin District Attorney.
The plan was to pin-prick Rick Perry, NOT INDICT HIM, as the case would have (and has) focused much more on her behavior than his.
But things didn’t work out as planned and Perry may well be our nominee for 2016. And yes, I still HATE HIM over toll roads and coddling Illegals...but maybe he’ll impress me...
3/4 of the states have to ratify it.
LOL!
Being away from DC during the recess temporarily restored their intellects. They’ll be their normal bumbling selves after breathing in the Potomac miasma a few days.
So Republicans would need 38, or Obama would need 39 - 42 in his counting method for states.
Correct.
I’m glad somebody got it, I was beginning to lose hope.
Congress would be become more powerful than even the British Parliament... to protect the interests of incumbent politicians who do not like having their political sins flayed in front of the voters. The Democrats’ measure has nothing to do with holding clean elections. And they have not argued why federalizing them makes it necessary to eviscerate two centuries of free speech in America.
We have legal tools on the books to combat political corruption and abuse of power. But that apparently is now insufficient to suit the political needs of today’s Democratic Senate majority who have lost sight of why have the First Amendment in the first place. All the American people ask is for them is to leave it well enough alone.
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