A growing number of Senate Democrats have voiced support for reforming existing filibuster rules, if not for all legislation, then at least to protect Americans’ voting rights. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, however, has been far more cautious about stating his preferred course.
Indeed, for nearly a year, the New York Democrat has gone out of his way to remain neutral in the larger fight over the future of majority-rule in the chamber. Asked for his opinion, Schumer has repeatedly noted the differences of opinion within his caucus — at which point he carefully changes the subject.
Yesterday, however, after the Republican minority refused to allow a debate to proceed on the Freedom to Vote Act, the Senate majority leader delivered interesting floor remarks that seemed to hint in an important direction. From Schumer’s prepared remarks:
“What we saw from Republicans today is not how the Senate is supposed to work. This is supposed to be the world’s greatest deliberative body, where we debate, forge compromise, amend and pass legislation to help the American people. That is the legacy of this great chamber. The Senate needs to be restored to its rightful status as the world’s greatest deliberative body.”
The phrasing stood out for me because it echoes the point reform advocates have pushed in recent years: Reforming the filibuster rules isn’t about creating a new and different kind of Senate; it’s about returning to the way the institution used to work before the routinization of filibuster abuses.
To “restore” the Senate “to its rightful status” would mean rejecting the status quo and returning to majority rule. (Maine Sen. Angus King raised a related point on the show last night, telling Rachel, “The filibuster is not in the Constitution; we need to restore the Senate to what it was.”)
Schumer went on to describe the political landscape in the wake of the Civil War:








