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To: Miss Marple

If cloture is invoked, debate ends, and the nomination moves to a vote...................I think. ;)


805 posted on 05/24/2005 9:09:01 AM PDT by MamaLucci (Mutually assured destruction STILL keeps the Clinton administration criminals out of jail.)
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To: MamaLucci

Why vote on cloture instead of just voting on the nominee?


807 posted on 05/24/2005 9:09:41 AM PDT by Rumierules
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To: MamaLucci

That is the way I understand it!


811 posted on 05/24/2005 9:09:49 AM PDT by defconw ( Vote Up or Down on Janice Brown!)
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To: MamaLucci

They can still debate for 30 hours more.


812 posted on 05/24/2005 9:10:23 AM PDT by michigander (The Constitution only guarantees the right to pursue happiness. You have to catch it yourself.)
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To: All

I don't understand what the hell is going on. Why are people like Sheets, voting yea?


816 posted on 05/24/2005 9:10:30 AM PDT by processing please hold (Islam and Christianity do not mix ----9-11 taught us that)
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To: MamaLucci
If cloture is invoked, debate ends, and the nomination moves to a vote...................I think. ;)

Debate gets cut off after another 30 hours.

817 posted on 05/24/2005 9:10:48 AM PDT by steveegg (Will the "extraordinary" line have the name Owen, Brown or Pryor attached to it?)
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To: MamaLucci

Feingold - NO.


820 posted on 05/24/2005 9:11:02 AM PDT by mhking (That's no moon...it's a space station...)
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To: MamaLucci
If cloture is invoked, debate ends, and the nomination moves to a vote ...

RULE XXII
PRECEDENCE OF MOTIONS

1. When a question is pending, no motion shall be received but

To adjourn.
To adjourn to a day certain, or that when the Senate adjourn it shall be to a day certain.
To take a recess.
To proceed to the consideration of executive business.
To lay on the table.
To postpone indefinitely.
To postpone to a day certain.
To commit.
To amend.

Which several motions shall have precedence as they stand arranged; and the motions relating to adjournment, to take a recess, to proceed to the consideration of executive business, to lay on the table, shall be decided without debate.

2. Notwithstanding the provisions of rule II or rule IV or any other rule of the Senate, at any time a motion signed by sixteen Senators, to bring to a close the debate upon any measure, motion, other matter pending before the Senate, or the unfinished business, is presented to the Senate, the Presiding Officer, or clerk at the direction of the Presiding Officer, shall at once state the motion to the Senate, and one hour after the Senate meets on the following calendar day but one, he shall lay the motion before the Senate and direct that the clerk call the roll, and upon the ascertainment that a quorum is present, the Presiding Officer shall, without debate, submit to the Senate by a yea-and-nay vote the question:

"Is it the sense of the Senate that the debate shall be brought to a close?" And if that question shall be decided in the affirmative by three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn -- except on a measure or motion to amend the Senate rules, in which case the necessary affirmative vote shall be two-thirds of the Senators present and voting -- then said measure, motion, or other matter pending before the Senate, or the unfinished business, shall be the unfinished business to the exclusion of all other business until disposed of.

Thereafter no Senator shall be entitled to speak in all more than one hour on the measure, motion, or other matter pending before the Senate, or the unfinished business, the amendments thereto, and motions affecting the same, and it shall be the duty of the Presiding Officer to keep the time of each Senator who speaks. Except by unanimous consent, no amendment shall be proposed after the vote to bring the debate to a close, unless it had been submitted in writing to the Journal Clerk by 1 o'clock p.m. on the day following the filing of the cloture motion if an amendment in the first degree, and unless it had been so submitted at least one hour prior to the beginning of the cloture vote if an amendment in the second degree. No dilatory motion, or dilatory amendment, or amendment not germane shall be in order. Points of order, including questions of relevancy, and appeals from the decision of the Presiding Officer, shall be decided without debate.

After no more than thirty hours of consideration of the measure, motion, or other matter on which cloture has been invoked, the Senate shall proceed, without any further debate on any question, to vote on the final disposition thereof to the exclusion of all amendments not then actually pending before the Senate at that time and to the exclusion of all motions, except a motion to table, or to reconsider and one quorum call on demand to establish the presence of a quorum (and motions required to establish a quorum) immediately before the final vote begins. The thirty hours may be increased by the adoption of a motion, decided without debate, by a three-fifths affirmative vote of the Senators duly chosen and sworn, and any such time thus agreed upon shall be equally divided between and controlled by the Majority and Minority Leaders or their designees. However, only one motion to extend time, specified above, may be made in any one calendar day.

http://rules.senate.gov/senaterules/rule22.htm


854 posted on 05/24/2005 9:13:44 AM PDT by Cboldt
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