When it comes to institutional reforms in the tragically dysfunctional U.S. Senate, there’s a growing sense that some changes are inevitable, though the scope of the reforms and the level of support remains entirely unclear.
Politico reports today that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) is increasingly focused on two ideas: (1) eliminating filibusters on motions to proceed, which seems like a no-brainer, and (2) forcing the filibustering minority to literally stand on the floor and try to talk a bill to death.
There’s ample room for debate on the merits of the reforms, whether they’d be effective, and whether they go far enough, but how the reforms are adopted is also likely to matter.
Republicans are threatening even greater retaliation if Reid uses a move rarely used by Senate majorities: changing the chamber’s precedent by 51 votes, rather than the usual 67 votes it takes to overhaul the rules.
“I think the backlash will be severe,” Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), the conservative firebrand, said sternly. “If you take away minority rights, which is what you’re doing because you’re an ineffective leader, you’ll destroy the place. And if you destroy the place, we’ll do what we have to do to fight back.”
“It will shut down the Senate,” the incoming Senate GOP whip, Texas Sen. John Cornyn, told POLITICO. “It’s such an abuse of power.”
Coburn and Cornyn are, of course, referring to the so-called “nuclear option,” which senators like Coburn and Cornyn helped come up with and used to support.
But even putting hypocrisy aside, there’s a certain oddity to the Republican threats. The GOP minority has abused Senate rules in ways unseen in American history, rendering the entire institution a dysfunctional mess, and creating mandatory supermajorities for the first time since the Senate was created over two centuries ago.
And if Democrats take steps to make policymaking slightly more efficient, then Republicans will “shut down the Senate”? The GOP threat is that the future will abandon the bipartisan comity and constructive process the nation has enjoyed in recent years?
Wait, it gets worse.
As Greg Sargent noted, Coburn’s complaints about taking away “minority rights” really don’t make sense.









