I’ve kept a close eye on the non-binding “Hastert Rule” because as best as I can tell, its fate will help dictate what gets done in Congress between now and 2015. And at this point, it seems the only certainty is that nothing is certain.
To briefly recap, the “Hastert Rule” is terrific for party discipline and partisan rule — it tells Republican Speakers to only bring bills to the floor that most of their own caucus supports (measures that enjoy a “majority of the majority”). The idea is, Republicans shouldn’t even consider bills if they’re dependent on Democratic votes to pass; the real power belongs in the hands of the House GOP’s far-right rank and file.
In early January, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) decided to ignore the “rule” to pass a bipartisan agreement resolving the “fiscal cliff.” At the time, Boehner said it was an unusual situation and he wouldn’t make a habit of it. Two weeks later, however, the Speaker did it again on Sandy disaster relief, and again he said these were unique circumstances.
And last week, Boehner did it again to pass the Violence Against Women Act, raising questions anew.
Speaker John A. Boehner sought to assure his conference on Tuesday that the “Hastert rule” is still regular practice, on the heels of breaking it for the third time this Congress. […]
At a closed-door conference meeting Tuesday, Rep. Lynn Westmoreland of Georgia asked Boehner whether he planned to keep bringing forward bills that split the GOP conference. Boehner told reporters after the meeting that the VAWA vote was an outlier and said he would like to abide by the Hastert rule.
The Speaker specifically explained yesterday that sidestepping the “rule” is “not a practice that I would expect to continue long term.”
Perhaps not, but Boehner’s expectations notwithstanding, he’s said this before.
I realize this probably seems like the ultimate in inside baseball — discussing a non-binding, informal rule about which bills Republican House Speakers bring to the floor isn’t exactly the sexiest of topics — but it actually matters.
Ramesh Ponnuru, a prominent conservative writer, noted last week:









