It stands to reason that any Senate measure to reduce gun violence will need at least 60 votes to overcome Republican obstructionist tactics. In fact, since literally every bill of any consequence is already effectively required by the GOP minority to get a supermajority, it stands to reason gun legislation would be no different.
But this one might be worth watching.
A trio of Republican senators on Tuesday warned Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) they plan to filibuster any attempts at bringing new gun control legislation to the floor of the Senate.
The move comes just days after Reid announced plans to push forward on a gun control bill which would expand background checks and penalties on straw purchasers.
Sens. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), Mike Lee (R-Utah), and Ted Cruz (R-Texas) argue in a letter to Reid that the proposed bill amounts to an infringement of Second Amendment rights.
Now, as a substantive matter, the notion that background checks are unconstitutional is kind of silly and very hard to take seriously. As Cruz knows very well, there’s nothing unconstitutional about any of the Democratic proposals on reducing gun violence, at least under existing Supreme Court precedent.
But what I’m especially interested in is whether the right-wing trio of senators is planning a real filibuster, along the lines of the 13-hour spectacle Paul and his allies recently offered.
Indeed, wouldn’t that be the ideal? Principled senators taking a bold stand against a policy they feel strongly about, shining a spotlight on a debate important to the public?
Of course, Paul, Lee, and Cruz would be taking something of a risk — drawing attention to the fact that they intend to block a debate on a proposal backed by 90% of Americans — but that’s what it makes it all the more worthwhile.
In an added twist, the January agreement on filibuster “reform” may even become relevant in this instance.









