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Senate Filibuster Targeted By House Democrats, Dream Act Activists In Federal Lawsuit
Senate Filibuster Targeted By House Democrats, Dream Act Activists In Federal Lawsuit
By Nick Wing A federal lawsuit claiming the filibuster is an unconstitutional "accident of history" is set to be considered on Monday, months after it was filed by a coalition of House Democrats and activists. The plaintiffs, including Democratic Reps. Keith Ellison (Minn.), Hank Johnson (Ga.), John Lewis (Ga.) and Mike Michaud (Maine), as well as a trio of undocumented immigrants represented by government reform group Common Cause, claim that the filibuster is "inconsistent with the principle of majority rule" and had never been contemplated by the drafters of the Constitution. They filed the suit in May, and on Monday will face a motion by Senate lawyers to have the case thrown out. Filibuster rules grant massive power to Senate minorities by requiring a supermajority of 60 senators to vote to end debate on a bill. Traditionally a rare occurrence, their use has surged since 2009. "Actual or threatened filibusters have become so common that it is now virtually impossible as a practical matter for the majority in the Senate to pass a significant piece of legislation or to confirm many presidential nominees without 60 votes," argued Emmet Bondurant, a Georgia attorney who represents the challengers, according to NBC News. In this particular case, Common Cause argues that filibuster rules are preventing Erika Andiola, Celso Mireles and Caesar Vargas -- three young professional undocumented immigrants -- from achieving a "path to American citizenship" offered by the long-stalled Dream Act. The legislation has been filibustered repeatedly by Senate Republicans, most recently in 2010. The latest legal push against the filibuster comes as Senate Democrats are seeking to reform the procedure through legislation. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has come out aggressively and optimistically in favor of filibuster reform, claiming that the changes will go through in January whether Republicans like it or not. President Barack Obama has embraced Reid's and other Democrats' plans to reform the rules. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/1...n_2270729.html |
Can't see how it's justiciable, to be honest. IIRC, it's just an internal procedure of that chamber of Congress.
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What a waste of time.
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Majority rule legislation sucks. Given the ineptitude of this Congress and the Congresses before that got us to where we are today, don't you think that some sort of bigger concensus should be agreed upon before laws were enacted?
Laws already pass WAY to easily. And now we want to give the most inept and power-hungry body in the nation an easier time in creating law? Yikes check that double yikes. |
I'm usually opposed to anything that has the word "activist" involved.
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Former Senator Byrd disagrees.en.
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Byrd delivered this speech on March 1, 2005. http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig4/byrd7.html |
So instead we have a system where the minority can hold the agenda for ransom. We have a system where the minority can impede the agenda by putting a 60 % margin for passage on any legislature. We have government crippled with only one agenda on the table for a whole year and then at the end of it the minority claiming they didn't have time to read the legislation that took an entire year to write. We have a system where the minority leader filibustered his own bill. We have a system where authors of the Veterans Jobs Bill voted to table their own bill because the President spoke out in favor of it. We have a system where the last Congress passed less legislation than any Congress going back to WWII with the entire nation on a wartime footing. We have a system where the government was not able to act to combat the largest recession since the great depression because Republicans wanted to make the President a one term president. In short we have gridlock at historical levels. We have a tyranny of the minority because of a rule developed by that great American Aaron Burr.
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I would ask Sen. Byrd how many times the smallest states voted as a block as he suggests against the bigger states?
If it was not set up for simple majority why was there a majority system in place until 1806 and the filibuster not added to Senate rules until 1917? Quote:
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I don't like, or believe in the filibuster. I've argued about its useless stupidity many times.
This lawsuit is garbage. The filibuster only exists because a majority of the senate wants it to exist. The MICROSECOND that 51 senators decide not to respect the filibuster, then *poof* it'll be gone. No one should ever take "well we got filibustered" as an acceptable answer. If the party you prefer is in power, they have the votes for what you want, no excuses, they should pass it. Any time something the majority wants is filibustered, its because they were too damned gutless and cowardly to get rid of the filibuster. There's no case here. |
That's a lie in the OP. Those three people have to live here five years and have to apply to become Citizens. There is a path. Good grief.
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You lie. Republicans changed the rules before they lost power to the current system where you only have to state intent to filibuster and can do so to both block discussion of a bill and then block voting on the bill. Reid was stupid to allow those rules to continue on a handshake and now you criticize him when he wants to go back to the old way. You're just a Republican shill if you can say they have done anything but abuse the system the last six years. |
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