Posted on 11/21/2013 4:56:25 PM PST by markomalley
Under the leadership of Harry Reid, and with the blessing of President Obama, Senate Democrats actually nuked the filibuster.
According to Chris Cillizza, Sean Sullivan, the issue that Reid saw as important enough to do something he said would change the U.S. Senate forever is the confirmation of three nominees to the U.S. Court of Appeals D.C. Circuit:
This time around, Democrats have pushed three nominees to the crucial D.C. circuit court, which handles most of the critical cases on interpreting federal law. The Rs say the court which tilts toward GOP-appointed judges at the moment doesnt need any more judges. And McCains gang of GOP senators agreed, blocking all 3 of Obamas nominees.
Some see these nominees as an effort to pack the court after a series of decisions Obama did not like.
The issue was similar last July when Reid and company convinced the Republicans to capitulate on President Obamas terrible nominees to the National Labor Relations Board. In tricking the Republicans into approving numerous nominees the Democrats promised they were not touching judges.
Harry Reid (D-NV): Were not touching judges. Thats what they were talking about. This is not judges. (NBCs Meet The Press, 7/14/13)
Reid didnt stop there. He made a similar promise at a Press briefing:
Harry Reid (D-NV): Were not talking about changing the filibuster rules that relates to nominations for judges. this is not about judges. (Sen. Reid, Press Briefing, 7/11/13)
Reid wasnt alone in making such representations. Senators Sherrod Brown and Amy Klobuchar also offered similar assurances:
Sherrod Brown (D-OH): I think any president should have the ability to put people in place for the at the pleasure of the president. These are not judges. Thats a whole another issue. (MSNBC, 7/9/13)
Amy Klobuchar (D-MN): I dont understand why for these nominees, Im not talking about judges here, Im talking about the presidents team, of which there are currently over 180 people that are just pending right now before the Senate for the Executive Office nominations. Why we cant just do 51 votes is beyond me. (ABCs This Week, 7/14/13)
We reported on Reids threatened use of the nuclear option then and apparently its time to dust that article off and publish parts of it again.
Harry Reid was the Senate Democrats Whip when George W. Bush became president. Under him, the Senate Democrats mounted an unprecedented filibuster campaign against Bushs judicial nominees. According to The Heritage Foundations Todd Gaziano, the average number of days a Court of Appeals nominee waited for final Senate action grew from 39 during the Reagan Presidency, 95 during the George H. W. Bush Presidency, and 115 during the Clinton Presidency to 400 during the first 22 months of the second Bush presidency.
The Democrats unprecedented delays imposed upon Bushs judicial nominees resulted in talk of using the nuclear option to end the Democrats filibusters. The nuclear option is shorthand for changing the Senate rules so that presidential nominations would no longer be subject to filibuster meaning they could be approved with just 51 votes, as opposed to the usual 60.
This is something that Senate Democrats warned about in apocalyptic terms when they were in the minority.
In May 2005 it looked as if Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist was actually going to pull the nuclear trigger. Sen. Reid gave a decent speech on the Senate floor explaining why nuking the filibuster would be wrong:
The filibuster is far from a procedural gimmick. It is part of the fabric of this institution. It was well known in colonial legislatures, and it is an integral part of our countrys 217 years of history.
The first filibuster in the U.S. Congress happened in 1790. It was used by lawmakers from Virginia and South Carolina who were trying to prevent Philadelphia from hosting the first Congress.
Since 1790, the filibuster has been employed hundreds and hundreds of times.
Senators have used it to stand up to popular presidents. To block legislation. And yes even to stall executive nominees.
[. . .]
It encourages moderation and consensus. It gives voice to the minority, so that cooler heads may prevail.
It also separates us from the House of Representatives where the majority rules.
And it is very much in keeping with the spirit of the government established by the Framers of our Constitution: Limited Government Separation of Powers Checks and Balances.
Mr. President, the filibuster is a critical tool in keeping the majority in check. This central fact has been acknowledged and even praised by Senators from both parties.
[. . .]
For 200 years, weve had the right to extended debate. Its not some procedural gimmick.
Its within the vision of the Founding Fathers of our country. They established a government so that no one person and no single party could have total control.
Some in this Chamber want to throw out 217 years of Senate history in the quest for absolute power.
Reid wasnt the only Senate Democrat to speak against the nuclear option in 2005. Senators Obama, Biden, Clinton, Baucus, Dodd, Feinstein, and Schumer, also railed against the proposed use of reconciliation to end Democrat filibusters.
You can watch highlights of some of their speeches in the following video:
(video at link)
BARACK OBAMA 4/13/05: Mr. President, I rise today to urge my colleagues to think about the implications of what has been called the nuclear option and what effect that might have on this Chamber and on this country. I urge all of us to think not just about winning every debate but about protecting free and democratic debate. (Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Floor remarks, Washington, DC, 4/13/05, Click here to watch.)
BARACK OBAMA 4/13/05: The American people want less partisanship in this town, but everyone in this chamber knows that if the majority chooses to end the filibuster, if they choose to change the rules and put an end to democratic debate, then the fighting, the bitterness, and the gridlock will only get worse. (Sen. Barack Obama, Floor remarks, Washington, D.C., 4/13/05, Click here to watch.)
BARACK OBAMA 4/13/05: Right now we are faced with rising gas prices, skyrocketing tuition costs, a record number of uninsured Americans, and some of the most serious national security threats we have ever had, while our bravest young men and women are risking their lives halfway around the world to keep us safe. These are challenges we all want to meet and problems we all want to solve, even if we do not always agree on how to do it. But if the right of free and open debate is taken away from the minority party and the millions of Americans who ask us to be their voice, I fear the partisan atmosphere in Washington will be poisoned to the point where no one will be able to agree on anything. That does not serve anybodys best interest, and it certainly is not what the patriots who founded this democracy had in mind. We owe the people who sent us here more than that. We owe them much more. (Sen. Barack Obama, Floor remarks, Washington, D.C., 4/13/05, Click here to watch.)
Barack Obama 4/25/05: The President hasnt gotten his way. And that is now prompting a change in the Senate rules that really I think would change the character of the Senate forever what I worry about would be that you essentially still have two chambers the House and the Senate but you have simply majoritarian absolute power on either side, and thats just not what the founders intended.
Hillary Clinton 5/23/2005: So this President has come to the majority in the Senate and basically said: Change the rules. Do it the way I want it done. And I guess there were not very many voices on the other side of the aisle that acted the way previous generations of Senators have acted and said: Mr. President, we are with you. We support you. But that is a bridge too far. We cannot go there. You have to restrain yourself, Mr. President. We have confirmed 95 percent of your nominees. And if you cannot get 60 votes for a nominee, maybe you should think about who you are sending to us to be confirmed because for a lifetime appointment, 60 votes, bringing together a consensus of Senators from all regions of the country, who look at the same record and draw the same conclusion, means that perhaps that nominee should not be on the Federal bench. (Sen. Hillary Clinton, Floor remarks, 5/23/05, Click here to watch.)
Charles Schumer 5/18/2005: We are on the precipice of a crisis, a constitutional crisis. The checks and balances which have been at the core of this Republic are about to be evaporated by the nuclear option. The checks and balances which say that if you get 51% of the vote you dont get your way 100% of the time. It is amazing its almost a temper tantrum.
Harry Reid 5/18/2005: Mr. President the right to extended debate is never more important than the one party who controls congress and the white house. In these cases the filibuster serves as a check on power and preserves our limited government.
Dianne Feinstein 5/18/2005: The nuclear option if successful will turn the senate into a body that could have its rules broken at any time by a majority of senators unhappy with any position taken by the minority. It begins with judicial nominations. Next will be executive appointments and then legislation.
Joe Biden 5/23/2005: Mr. President, my friends and colleagues, I have not been here as long as Senator Byrd, and no one fully understands the Senate as well as Senator Byrd, but I have been here for over three decades. This is the single most significant vote any one of us will cast in my 32 years in the Senate. I suspect the Senator would agree with that. We should make no mistake. This nuclear option is ultimately an example of the arrogance of power. It is a fundamental power grab by the majority party, propelled by its extreme right and designed to change the reading of the Constitution, particularly as it relates to individual rights and property rights. It is nothing more or nothing less. We have been through these periods before in American history but never, to the best of my knowledge, has any party been so bold as to fundamentally attempt to change the structure of this body. (Sen. Joe Biden, Floor remarks, Washington, D.C., 5/23/05, Click here to watch.)
Harry Reid 5/18/2005: But no we are not going to follow the Senate rules. No, because of the arrogance of power of this Republican administration.
Chris Dodd 5/18/2005: Ive never passed a single bill worth talking about that didnt have a lead co-sponsor that was a Republican. And I dont know of a single piece of legislation thats ever been adopted here that didnt have a Republican and Democrat in the lead. Thats because we need to sit down and work with each other. The rules of this institution have required that. Thats why we exist. Why have a bicameral legislative body? Why have two chambers? What were the framers thinking about 218 years ago? They understood Mr. President that there is a tyranny of the majority.
Dianne Feinstein 5/18/2005: If the Republican leadership insists on forcing the nuclear option the senate becomes ipso facto the House of Representatives where the majority rules supreme and the party of power can dominate and control the agenda with absolute power.
Hillary Clinton 5/23/2005: Youve got majority rule and then you have the senate over here where people can slow things down where they can debate where they have something called the filibuster. You know it seems like its a little less than efficient well thats right it is. And deliberately designed to be so.
Harry Reid 5/18/05: The filibuster is not a scheme and it certainly isnt new. The filibuster is far from a procedural gimmick. Its part of the fabric of this institution we call the Senate. It was well-known in colonial legislatures before we became a country, and its an integral part of our countrys 214-year history. The first filibuster in the United States Congress happened in 1790. It was used by lawmakers from Virginia and South Carolina who were trying to prevent Philadelphia from hosting the first Congress. Since then, the filibuster has been employed hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of times. Its been employed on legislative matters, its been employed on procedural matters relating to the presidents nominations for Cabinet and sub-Cabinet posts, and its been used on judges for all those years. One scholar estimates that 20 percent of the judges nominated by presidents have fallen by the wayside, most of them as a result of filibusters. Senators have used the filibuster to stand up to popular presidents, to block legislation, and, yes, even, as Ive stated, to stall executive nominees. The roots of the filibuster are found in the Constitution and in our own rules. (Sen. Harry Reid, Floor remarks, 5/18/05, Click here to watch.)
Harry Reid 5/18/05: For 200 years weve had the right to extended debate. Its not some procedural gimmick. Its within the vision of the founding fathers of our country. They did it; we didnt do it. They established a government so that no one person and no single party could have total control. Some in this chamber want to throw out 214 years of Senate history in the quest for absolute power. They want to do away with Mr. Smith, as depicted in that great movie, being able to come to Washington. They want to do away with the filibuster. They think theyre wiser than our founding fathers. I doubt that thats true. (Sen. Harry Reid, Floor remarks, 5/18/05, Click here to watch.)
Hillary Clinton 5/23/2005: And I just had to hope that maybe between now and the time we have this vote there would be enough Senators who will say: Mr. President, no. We are sorry, we cannot go there. We are going to remember our Founders. We are going to remember what made this country great. We are going to maintain the integrity of the U.S. Senate. (Sen. Hillary Clinton, Floor remarks, 5/23/05, Click here to watch.)
Joe Biden 5/23/05: Isnt what is really going on here that the majority does not want to hear what others have to say, even if it is the truth? Senator Moynihan, my good friend who I served with for years, said: You are entitled to your own opinion but not your own facts. The nuclear option abandons Americas sense of fair play. It is the one thing this country stands for: Not tilting the playing field on the side of those who control and own the field. I say to my friends on the Republican side: You may own the field right now, but you wont own it forever. I pray God when the Democrats take back control, we dont make the kind of naked power grab you are doing. But I am afraid you will teach my new colleagues the wrong lessons. (Sen. Joe Biden, Floor remarks, 5/23/05, Click here to watch.)
Charles Schumer 5/23/2005: They want their way every single time. And they will change the rules, break the rules, and misread the constitution so that they will get their way.
Hillary Clinton 5/23/2005: The Senate is being asked to turn itself inside out, to ignore the precedent to ignore the way our system has work, the delicate balance that we have obtain that has kept this constitution system going, for immediate gratification of the present President.
Max Baucus 5/19/2005: This is the way Democracy ends. Not with a bomb but with a gavel.
Mitch McConnell appropriately summed it all up today, If you like the rules of the Senate, you can keep them.
Cooler heads prevailed in 2005. The so-called Gang of 14 negotiated a compromise which avoided the deployment of the nuclear option.
In 2008, Reid talked about the importance of the filibuster with former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle during an interview about Reids book, The Good Fight. Reid told Daschle that as long as he was the Senate leader the Senate would not face the nuclear option. That the threat of using it was a black chapter in the history of the Senate and that he really believes it will ruin our country.
Dont take my word for it. You can watch the discussion between Reid and Daschle here. You can also read a transcript of it below:
Daschle: You talk Harry about the nuclear option, you just mentioned it on chapter seven of your book, describes the circumstances with the nuclear option. Just so our viewers can better understand, what was the nuclear option and what likelihood is there that we going to have to face nuclear option-like questions again?
Reid: What the Republicans came up with was a way to change our country forever. They made a decision if they didnt get every judge they wanted, every judge they wanted, then they were going to make the Senate just like the House of Representatives. We would in effect have a unicameral legislature where a simple majority would determine whatever happens.
In the House of Representatives today Pelosi is the leader. Prior to that was Hastert. Whatever they wanted, Hastret or Pelosi, they get done. The rules over there allow that. The Senate was set up to be different. That was the genius, the vision, of our founding fathers that this bicameral legislature, which was unique, had two different duties. One, was as Franklin said, to pour the coffee into the saucer and let it cool off. Thats why you have the ability to filibuster and to terminate filibuster. They wanted to get rid of all that. Thats what the nuke option all about.
Daschle: And is there any likelihood that were going to face circumstances like that again?
Reid: As long as Im the leader, the answer is no. I think we should just forget that. That is a black chapter in the history of the Senate. I hope we never, ever get to that again. Because I really do believe it will ruin our country. Ive said, I said during that debate, that in all my years in government, that is the most important thing I ever worked on.
Reid put it this way in his book, the nuclear option would lead to the end of the United States Senate:
I just couldnt believe that Bill Frist was going to do this. The storm had been gathering all year, and word from conservative columnists and in conservative circles was that Senator Frist of Tennessee, who was the Majority Leader, had decided to pursue a rules change that would kill the filibuster for judicial nominations. And once you opened that Pandoras box, it was just a matter of time before a Senate leader who couldnt get his way on something moved to eliminate the filibuster for regular business as well. And that, simply put, would be the end of the United States Senate. Harry Reid in his 2008 book The Good Fight
What could justify Reids use of the nuclear option he has repeatedly said would be the end of the United States Senate, would ruin the country, and even the threat of using it was a black chapter in the history of the Senate?
As Reid has written, once you open that Pandoras box, its just a matter of time before a Senate leader who cant get his way on something moves to eliminate the filibuster for regular business as well. And that, simply put, would be the end of the United States Senate.
Reids nuking of the filibuster provides a couple of teaching moments. first, it is an example of why Republicans cant afford to compromise with the Democrats. When you try to appease them, it just encourages them and they keep coming back for more. You would think that with the bashing they are taking over ObamaCare the Democrats would have learned more respect for governing by consensus as opposed to strick party-line simple majority rule.
Second, it demonstrates that President Obama isnt the only Democrat who has an honesty problem.
OK...the dhimmicraps lied.
Anyone surprised by that, please, raise your hand...
It surprises me when they tell the truth.
I would imagine that if the R’s win back the Senate then the dims will just change the rules back before they give up the majority in Jan 2015.
Exactly correct. The Donkeys have already indicated they will do this. The Donkeys in the Senate should all be indicted on RICO charges (and quite a few of the RINOs). Mitch McConnellMCCain, Graham, and the other RINOs have been blind sided by their buddies from across the aisle. Like abused spouses, they will rollover and become docile tools of the Donkeys. RINOs are without spines, cajones, and principles. All they want is loot, the trappings of power, and perks. The U.S. Senate is a criminal enterprise.
You know the Dims in the Senate have managed one thing the Pubs could not ever (as far as I know)manage in recent years and that is a high level of cohesive voting. They seem to vote as a block every time while the pubs are fighting over in the corner.
So, in lieu of this, someone that knows sumpthin, please tell me why the pubs should even show up from now on. My god! Go fishing. Your vote absolutely does not matter! And, if anybody thinks this will be limited to just appeals of appeal judges appointments, I have a bridge to sell you! The Senate, as a functioning institution simply does not exist. As Bill Oreilly would say........”am I wrong?”
They are aware of that possibility, and are relying on Republicans to agree to reinstate the filibuster. What they need to do is pass legislation limiting the jurisdiction of the leftists they just approved and adding hundreds of new judgeships that they will confirm with 50 votes.
>>>To hell with procedural calls. I said this on another thread and I say it again: It is time for a freakin’ REVOLUTION. I’m not just talking out my butt, I’m serious folks. If someone who has the influence, the media outlet and the wherewithal to organize a full-scale March/Revolution to march on, and shut-down, Washington D.C., I’d get there if I had to hitch-hike. Desperate times call for desperate measures. We need a REVOLUTION.<<<
Oh, goody, newbie. Says here you joined FR on 29 Oct 2013. My guess is that you’re what the left used to call the agent provocateur, the mole inserted into an organization to create mayhem and incite violence for the purpose of having the authorities slam down hard. The establishment left, including those in control of the nation’s capital, would love to focus the power of the federal government against citizen groups like Free Republic.
If you’re not an outside troublemaker, I’d suggest using your head and working with a strategy.
The mortal wounds will be applied by democrats very soon with the nuclear option. All sorts of left wing judges will now sail through the democrat majority senate. The effect will last many decades. McConnell should have displayed more of a fight than he did. If Cruz was the minority leader, you would have observed a much different resistance.
Democrats are Law-Less because Republicans are BALL-LESS!
We are now a Banana Republic....WITHOUT the DAMN Bananas!!!
Democrats LIE!
It is filling vacancies. The republicans position has benn for a while, that the judgeship positions should be transferred to appellate courts with higher workloads - the DC court having about a quarter the workload per judge as some of the other appeals courts, even with these vacancies.
Hence the conclusion that Obama is just trying to pack the court - especially since the impetus to get judges seated appears to correlate with his losing rulings.
We have serious problems.
We have a relentless and insatiable mortal enemy, and most of it’s victims have no clue what is going on and actually support their mortal enemy.
This is gonna get real damn bad, real damn soon.
OK, I can do that. Now, tell me what is the strategy. Because what the Republicans in Washington are doing isn’t working. They talk a big game every once in awhile and then they give in like an unpaid whore. So, are you saying that we just sit back and let Obama, the Democrats, the Liberals and the main stream media keep screwing us and telling us that we like it?
We have serious problems.
We have a relentless and insatiable mortal enemy, and most of its victims have no clue what is going on and actually support their mortal enemy.
This is gonna get real damn bad, real damn soon.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
So, what can we do about it? I’m down for just about anything.
Well as I have said to others on this subject, the Article V solution Mark Levin has proposed is the last possible civil solution in my eyes.
These damn criminals aren’t going to reign themselves in, so we must do it, and that is a civil method that can and should be employed.
Beyond that, I think we can all see where this is going to end up.
They had the votes, we didn’t. The outcome would have not been different no matter who carried our ball.
I disagree. McConnell hardly put up any resistance. He is not showing up on TV channels talking about this. If Cruz or Lee or Paul were the minority leaders, they would be getting their face on every news network to explain what the democraps have done, and expose all their hypocrisy & speeches opposing the nuclear option some years back. McConnell? Nothing! Besides he has the charisma of a old and sick turtle.
That’s your right.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.