Chad Pergram Profile picture
Sep 18, 2020 35 tweets 5 min read Read on X
1) There is talk Dems could try to end the Senate filibuster if they win control this fall. The filibuster exasperates the majority. But the minority always embraces it. GOPers warn Dems could try to pass Green New Deal/Medicare for All & gun control if they kill the filibuster
2) Fmr Senate MajLdr Reid to Fox: “It’s not a question of if (the filibuster) is going to be gone. It’s a question of when it’s going to be done,” said Reid. “The filibuster is history. It won’t be in existence next year at this time.”
3) That said, Schumer is cagey when asked about eliminating the filibuster. He says nothing is "on the table" or "off the table."
4) For a moment, let’s examine the hallmark of the Senate. Unlike the House of Representatives, the Senate is a body of equals. Each senator ostensibly carries equal weight. As such a big body with 435 members, the House is parsimonious when forking out debate time.
5) “The fundamental difference between the two houses is that House members are limited as to how long they can debate. In the Senate, debate is unlimited. Each, individual senator has an enormous amount of leverage,” said former Senate Parliamentarian Alan Frumin.
6) That said, it’s rare for senators to hold forth with long-winded speeches to actually stall legislation. Most filibusters are simply threats. A senator or group of senators makes it clear to leaders that they will use their prerogatives on the floor to derail a given bill.
7) It is often said that the House is a majoritarian institution, favoring the party which is in the majority. But by contrast, the Senate is a minoritarian institution, granting significant power to the side which has fewer members.

That is the Senate’s quintessence.
8) But, the Senate has long had a method to sidetrack filibusters. It’s called “invoking cloture.” If the Senate rounds up 60 votes, it can “invoke cloture” and neutralize a filibuster.
9) This addresses what McConnell and others predict Democrats will do if they win the Senate. Democrats could lower the bar to nullify a filibuster from 60 to a simple majority of 51.
10) It was none other than Harry Reid who cracked the door open to alter filibuster procedures in November, 2013 with what was “Nuclear Option #1.” Reid dropped the threshold from 60 votes to end a filibuster to a simple majority for all executive branch nominees.
11) This was not a rules change. The Senate conducts much of its business via precedent. In fact, the Senate book of precedent is voluminous compared to the Standing Rules of the Senate.
12) Via an inventive parliamentary gambit, Reid established a new precedent for breaking filibusters on executive branch nominations. Fifty-one yeas were now the benchmark to end a filibuster under those circumstances. Not 60.
13) In 2017, McConnell capitalized on Reid’s 2013 maneuver. The Kentucky Republican mimicked what Reid did, lowering the bar to a bare majority to overcome filibusters of Supreme Court nominees.
14) That meant legislation was the only thing senators could still filibuster. Garden variety bills would still entail a supermajority to crack a filibuster.
15) Both McConnell and Schumer long said that preserving the legislative filibuster was hallowed ground and that senators didn’t support upending that tradition. But that turf is now shifting.
16) “Why should a democracy require a 60 percent vote to get something done?” asked Reid. “It’s going to be good for the body politic to get rid of it.”
17) “This republic has benefited greatly from having an institution where, the minority, those who are our power, are not in fact, powerless,” said Frumin. “If you remove the filibuster completely, you are rendering millions and millions of people, in a sense, powerless.”
18) “The Nuclear Option” is a parliamentary maneuver to establish new Senate PRECEDENT. I repeat, the proposal we are discussing is a PRECEDENT change. NOT a rules change. The Senate has 44 “standing rules.” However, the book of “precedents” is voluminous.
19) Most of what the Senate does is based on precedent, not standing rules. Moreover, it takes 67 votes to end a filibuster leading up to a RULES CHANGE. That’s right. Not 60 yeas. 67. But, establishing a new precedent entails only a simple majority.
20) In November, 2013, Senate Democrats (then in the majority) initiated the nuclear option. They lowered the bar to break a filibuster from 60 yeas to 51 yeas on all executive branch nominees such as federal judges and cabinet secretaries, EXCEPT the Supreme Court.
21) It is said that paybacks are hell. In April, 2017, GOPers (now in the majority) initiated a nuclear option of their own. GOPers dropped the filibuster bar for SCOTUS nominees. That’s how they confirmed Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch, and, later, Justice Brett Kavanaugh.
22) Here’s what established the current “precedent” under which the Senate operates:

Gorsuch faced a filibuster. Gorsuch’s nomination had more than 51 yeas for confirmation. But he lacked 60 to end the filibuster.
23) The Senate voted to close debate on Gorsuch’s nomination (cloture). But that roll call came up short. So, we had a FAILED CLOTURE VOTE. This is key and where the “nuclear option” comes in. McConnell obviously supported finishing debate on Gorsuch nomination.
24) But McConnell switched his vote at the end of the failed cloture vote from yea to nay. The Senate allows senators to call for a “revote” if they are on the prevailing side of the issue. In other words, Gorsuch got a simple majority. But the “noes” prevailed.
25) So McConnell became a no. This gave McConnell the option of asking the Senate to “reconsider” the failed vote and make another run at invoking cloture. Once McConnell switched his vote, he could move to proceed to the failed cloture vote. That only needed 51 yeas.
26) Then McConnell made a motion for the Senate to retake the failed cloture vote on Gorsuch. That also just needed a simple majority. So after those parliamentary gymnastics, the Senate had RETURNED to the failed cloture vote.
27) It is often said that the Senate has “unlimited debate.” Not really. There are only a few parliamentary cul-de-sacs in which the Senate can harness debate. The do-over of a failed vote to end debate is one of them. This is where McConnell lit the fuse on Nuclear Option II.
28) McConnell simply followed the PRECEDENT established by Reid for Nuclear Option I. Senate Rule XXII governs cloture in the Senate. So McConnell raised a point of order that “the vote on cloture under Rule 22 for all nominations to the Supreme Court is by a majority vote.”
29) A “point of order” is where a senator questions whether the Senate is operating under correct procedure. And in fact, up until then, it had been. It took 60 votes to quash a filibuster on a Supreme Court nominee.
30) But what McConnell was asserting is that the Senate wasn’t operating under current procedure.

Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough ruled against McConnell, citing the Senate’s established precedent of 60 votes, not 51, to break a filibuster.
31) McConnell was informed that that the “point of order is not sustained.”

But McConnell next asked the Senate to override the ruling. The Senate would then vote on “Shall the decision of the Chair stand as the judgment of the Senate?”
32) That initiated another roll call vote. Republicans voted nay. After all, they didn’t want the “decision of the Chair” based on old Senate precedent to stand. So, if a MAJORITY of senators voted against the ruling, the Senate would establish a new precedent.
33) And that’s precisely what happened.

To end the legislative filibuster, Democrats would root for the NOES to prevail.

But…

On Capitol Hill, it’s about the math, it’s about the math, it’s about the math.
34) Democrats would first need to have a majority of the Senate – and, command at least 51 yeas to establish a new precedent, overruling the Parliamentarian, to euthanize the legislative filibuster.
35) Democrats will likely have a narrow majority if they do win Senate control. But, one wonders if they could get 51 senators to stick together to end the legislative filibuster.

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More from @ChadPergram

Apr 30
1) The Hitchhiker’s Guide To How Democrats Support for Johnson Could Backfire On the Speaker

An astonishing email just hit inboxes around Capitol Hill from the House Democratic leadership team of House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), House Minority Whip Katherine Clark (D-MA) and House Democratic Caucus Chairman Pete Aguilar (D-CA):

“We will vote to table Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s Motion to Vacate the Chair. If she invokes the motion, it will not succeed.”
2) So you have DEMOCRATIC leaders telling their rank-and-file members they support short-circuiting an effort to unseat House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA).

Here’s why this is a big deal:

It was thought that House Democrats would protect Johnson in some form if Greene were to trigger her resolution. That hasn’t happened yet. But it was believed that a small number of Democrats might vote to table or kill Greene’s motion, thus protecting him. Or, Democrats might just “take a walk” during that vote, diluting the voting pool in the House. That would protect Johnson by having fewer Democrats vote. Thus, Democrats could inoculate Johnson – without ever taking a vote.
3) But it is a MAJOR DEAL when the entire Democratic leadership team and rank-and-file Democrats say they would vote to protect Johnson.

Great for Johnson, right?

Maybe immediately. But there is a BIG downside here.

Such a maneuver could embolden the smaller coterie of Republicans who want to oust Johnson. And even some rank-and-file Republicans could see that Johnson is only in the job because of the Democrats. Thus Johnson is a “Democratic” Speaker. Especially since he largely did the Democrats’ bidding passing the Ukraine aid bill a few weeks ago, avoided multiple government shutdowns and passed nearly every major bill in recent months with lots of Democratic support – often with more Democratic votes than from Republicans.

This might not undercut Johnson now. But it could give those who might want his job – potentially House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-LA), House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-MN) and House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-OH) – an opportunity to use Democratic support as a wedge and perhaps challenge Johnson for Speaker next year or a leadership post in the new Congress if Republicans lose the majority.
Read 5 tweets
Mar 25
1) User's Manual to how control of the House could flip to the Democrats before the election.

Control of the House has never changed in the middle of a Congress. But if it’s going to happen, the 118th Congress is as ripe for that possibility.
2) House Republicans face chaos in their conference. Members who planned to retire next January are now ditching Capitol Hill early. The House is an acrimonious place with yet another move afoot to dethrone the Speaker.
3) Fox is told that other Republicans are angling to get out as soon as they can. A big payday in the private sector could lure some members to cash in their voting card early.

First, let’s talk about the length of a given “Congress.”
Read 25 tweets
Mar 22
A) From colleague Kelly Phares. There is sparring between Cotton and Tester about who is holding up an agreement to vote on the minibus spending bill.
B) Off the Senate floor, the two men came face to face while speaking to separate groups of reporters. Sen Cotton yelled at Tester over all the reporters: "Why don't you ask Senator Tester why we aren't voting?"

Sen Tester yelled back: "You can ask me anything you want!"
C) Tester then spoke to reporters: "Did Cotton say that they're holding amendments because of Jon Tester? Because if he did, he might be full of something that comes off the back of a cow"
Read 4 tweets
Mar 22
1) There is no agreement between senators on a voting on a host of amendments related to border, migration and the Laken Riley Act. The mood in the Senate has grown increasingly dark over the past two hours and time slipping off the clock.
2) Even if the sides were to get a deal now, it would be hard to finish up before the 11:59:59 pm et deadline to align with the House.
3) “I thought we’d have it by now,” said Sen. John Hoeven (R-ND), looking at his watch, noting that deals like this usually come together around the 7 pm et hour.

When asked what the Republicans were offering, Sen. Peter Welch (D-VT) replied “nothing good.”
Read 8 tweets
Mar 20
1) Fox has learned that the Attorney General for the District of Columbia has dropped charges against Steve Nikoui for disrupting Congress during the President’s State of the Union speech earlier this month.
2) Nikoui is the father of Kareem Nikoui who was killed during the Biden Administration’s chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021.

Fox learned of the decision this evening. The decision to drop the charges was confirmed by the Speaker’s Office.
3) Fox was told the DC AG’s office decided not to prosecute in this case just as they have in the cases of protesters in the past.

Steve Nikoui was a guest of Rep. Brian Mast (R-FL) for the speech and interrupted the President, shouting “Abbey Gate!”
Read 6 tweets
Mar 12
1) House GOP and could mean the House is down to a one-seat majority soon, not long after Buck resignation

It is ALWAYS about the math.

That is augmented by the resignation of Rep. Ken Buck (R-CO) next week.
2) Buck tells me he will remain a member until the end of the day on March 22.

That is also the deadline for the next batch of spending bills to avoid a shutdown.

Also, the GOP majority could even shrivel more before it gets better.
3) The next special election is for the seat occupied by former Rep. Brian Higgins (D-NY) on April 30. If that seat stays in Democratic hands, the new breakdown is 432 members with 218 Republicans and 214 Democrats.
Read 4 tweets

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