Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) has been more reluctant than most progressive senators to change how the institution functions — or, too often, fails to function. The New Jersey Democrat, however, now appears to be newly open to necessary changes.
Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) on Thursday joined the growing chorus of Democrats calling for reforms to the Senate‘s longstanding 60-vote threshold for passing legislation, arguing that congressional gridlock is preventing America from being globally competitive. “For the sake of our vulnerable populations, for the sake of America doing big things again, the filibuster has to be reformed,” Booker said in an interview with HuffPost.
Of course, “reforming” the filibuster can mean many different things, and the details matter. But Booker’s comments nevertheless suggest a realization that the status quo is untenable, and the Garden State senator is open to change in ways that was not previously the case.
Indeed, during Booker’s run for the presidency, he stubbornly stuck to his guns and defended the Senate’s existing filibuster rules. More to the point, 31 Senate Democrats signed a joint, bipartisan statement four years ago in support of preserving the legislative filibuster for the indefinite future.
Booker was one of the 31. Four years later, he agrees that “the filibuster has to be reformed.”
What’s more, he’s not alone. As we recently discussed, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) also was among the 31 Senate Dems who wanted to leave the filibuster rules intact four years ago. Now, with her party’s democracy-reform package on the line, the Minnesota Democrat “would get rid of the filibuster.”
Circling back to our earlier coverage, the list keeps growing. Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) also signed the 2017 statement demanding that the legislative filibuster remain intact indefinitely. He’s changed his mind, too.









