Republicans made holding hostage the confirmation of President Obama’s nominees almost routine in the Senate. Obama’s seal of approval effectively blacklisted many nominees from Republican consideration. The process meant that highly qualified candidates — even by some conservatives’ own admission — barely stood a chance of averting a GOP-led filibuster.
That was, until Thursday.
Harry Reid ended the weeks, months – years, really – of unprecedented obstruction with a single knockout punch. Fed up with the state of perpetual political standstill, the Senate majority leader on Thursday followed through on his threats, handing Democrats a desperately needed victory.
“The need for change is so, so very obvious,” Reid said on the Senate floor. “It’s clearly visible.”
He convinced Democrats in the Senate to go nuclear, voting to get rid of a 60-vote requirement to get the president’s nominees confirmed. The move strikes down nearly 225 years of precedent and breaks the GOP choke hold on presidential picks.
The Nevada Democrat has lobbed round after round of threats to take action against GOP obstruction, most recently over the summer when Reid threatened to go nuclear after Republicans blocked a number of executive nominations, including Richard Cordray as permanent director of the Consumer Financial Protection Board. But Republicans eventually hammered out a deal and approved the nominations in exchange for Democrats agreeing not to alter the rules.
This time around, there were no signs of negotiations — by either side. Instead, within two days of Reid saying he was considering the rule change, he rounded up the votes and passed the measure rather than enduring another round of Republicans blocking judicial nominees.
As Reid pointed out, in the history of the nation, there have been 168 filibusters of executive and judicial nominations. Of those, an astounding half of those occurred during the Obama administration in the last four-and-a-half years. He delivered withering criticism of the right on the Senate floor, shortly before the vote.
“It is a troubling trend that Republicans are willing to block executive branch nominees even when they have no objection to the qualifications of the nominee,” said Reid. “Instead, they block qualified executive branch nominees to circumvent the legislative process.”
Reid was met with standing ovations after the vote. President Obama and Vice President Joe Biden applauded the Democrats’ decision. Clearly, Democrats were thrilled to show that their knees aren’t weak and spines aren’t wobbly.
“Whatever Obama favors, the GOP opposes. Simple as that…It was time to push the button,” said Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson.









