Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has threatened to change Senate rules so that just 51 votes would end a filibuster on executive branch nominees, rather than the current 60 needed.
This morning, Reid explained that changing filibuster rules will keep the Senate relevant.
“My efforts are directed to save the Senate from becoming obsolete, to remain relevant and effective as an institution,” Reid said at a Center for American Progress Action Fund event Monday.
But Reid also used the speech, in front of a left-leaning audience, to criticize Senate Republicans adding, “The power of an extreme minority now threatens our integrity of this institution.”
Democrats and Republicans are set to meet Monday night to discuss the possible a rule change, but is a filibuster change even possible?
The Nevada Democrat’s current threat will likely face procedural hurdles, according to former Senate parliamentarian Robert Dove.
“It only takes a majority to change the rules of the Senate,” Dove explained in Monday’s “Deep Dive” on The Daily Rundown. “But if there is debate it takes 67 or two-thirds to shut off that debate. And my reaction is that this kind of proposal would be contentious and therefore it would require a cloture vote that was two-thirds.”
But Dove said that changing the rules is not impossible in theory. He cited the rules change of 1975 when a bipartisan group eventually gathered the 67 votes needed for a rule change.








