As Capitol Hill came to terms with the looming “nuclear option” fight next week, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) was still fuming last night. The Republican who precipitated the showdown by abusing the rules yesterday accused Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) of sabotaging a meeting on the issue by scheduling it for a Monday night.
Yes, according to McConnell, asking senators to work on a Monday night is necessarily outrageous. It’s shaping up to be that kind of debate.
In the meantime, we’re also getting a sense of how McConnell’s party will respond to the move, if Democrats follow through on their threat.
Senate Republicans vow no other legislation will pass the Senate until after the next elections if Democrats trigger the “nuclear option” to change the chamber’s rules. […]
“If Sen. Reid changes the character of the Senate, then the Senate ceases to function. We’ll take our case to the people, we’ll argue for a new majority and then Republicans will be in a position to do whatever Republicans with 51 votes want to do,” said Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), who spoke out against Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s (D-Nev.) threat to trigger the nuclear option.
This is why it’s called the “nuclear” option — the tactic is considered so aggressive that the minority party will retaliate by effectively blowing up the chamber’s ability to function.
But there are three angles to keep in mind here. First, note the specifics of Alexander’s threat of retaliation: while Reid is eyeing the end of filibusters on executive-branch nominations, Alexander is saying Republicans will respond by eliminating filibusters on literally everything. (I’m not sure why anyone should consider a majority-rule institution a scary thing.)
Second, if Republicans follow through on their retaliatory threat, Congress will pass nothing until 2015. Since Congress was unlikely to pass anything anyway, this doesn’t sound especially scary, though it does make the prospect of a government shutdown more serious.
And third, I find it curious that Lamar Alexander considers himself a credible voice on this issue. He’s not.









