Filibuster reform? What filibuster reform?
Senate Republicans ran the clock until nearly 1 a.m. Thursday morning to confirm one of President Obama’s picks to serve on the powerful D.C. Circuit Court.
Nina Pillard was finally confirmed by a 51-44 vote, hours after debate began on Wednesday afternoon.
The overnight talkathon comes on the heels of Senate Democrats decision last month to “go nuclear” — voting to get rid of a 60-vote requirement to get the president’s nominees confirmed. The move struck down nearly 225 years of precedent.
While the rules change was employed to break the GOP choke hold on presidential picks, Republicans are still able to slow down the consideration of the nominees. In Pillard’s case, the GOP forced the Dems to use all allotted 30 hours of debate on her nomination by not agreeing to yield back any time.
The tactic threatens Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s desire to finish 2013’s legislative business. There are at least nine more nominee votes scheduled over the next few days.
Reid said he would push forward with the nominations, even if it disrupts the upcoming holiday.
“If we have to work the weekend before Christmas, we’re going to do that,” the Nevada Democrat said on the Senate floor. “If we have to work Monday before Christmas, we’re going to do that.”









