One Step Closer to Tyranny
WASHINGTON (AP) — Sweeping aside a century of precedent,
Democrats took a chunk out of the Senate's hallowed filibuster tradition
on Thursday and cleared the way for speedy confirmation of
controversial appointments made by President Barack Obama and chief
executives in the future.
Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., who orchestrated the change, called
the 52-48 vote a blow against gridlock. Republicans warned Democrats
will eventually regret their actions once political fortunes are
reversed and they can no longer block appointments made by a GOP
president.
At the White House, Obama welcomed the shift. "The gears of government
have got to work," he said, and he declared that Republicans had
increasingly used existing rules "as a reckless and relentless tool to
grind all business to a halt."
But Republicans warned of a power grab by Democrats, some predicting
that worse was yet to come. "This drastic move sets a dangerous
precedent that could later be expanded to speed passage of expansive and
controversial legislation," said Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama.
The day's change involved presidential appointees, not legislation — and not Supreme Court nominees.
The immediate impact was to ensure post-Thanksgiving confirmation for
Patricia Millett, one of Obama's three stalled nominees for the District
of Columbia Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals, and for others whom
Republicans have blocked. Rep. Mel Watt, D-N.C., tapped to head the
Federal Housing Finance Agency, is among them.
The longer-term result of the unilateral move by Democrats was harder to
gauge in a Senate that has grown deeply constrained by the major
political differences emblematic of an era of divided government.
At issue was a rule that has required a 60-vote majority to end debate
in the 100-member Senate and assure a yes-or-no vote on presidential
nominees to federal courts or to Cabinet departments or other agencies.
Under a parliamentary maneuver scripted in advance, Democrats changed
the proceedings so that only a simple majority was required to clear the
way for a final vote. In Senate-speak, this was accomplished by
establishing a new precedent under the rules, rather than a formal rules
change.
Supreme Court nominations still will be subject to a traditional
filibuster, the term used to describe the 60-vote requirement to limit
debate.
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