I happen to disagree with Double Trouble, the filibuster may be a decent tactic to use rarely, but when its used all the time, its not such a good idea because it creates a tyranny of the minority and total grid lock where nothing can be done. The filibuster may have worked fine in the past but its current and total overuse threatens its purpose.
As it is, what the democrats lack is lock step party unity, so a decent balance of power is maintained as it is.
Each President has his priorities that they want.
Congress then determines what they are willing to provide.
It is then up to the President to accept or reject the package.
With the line Item veto out; it becomes an all or nothing unless they can control funding distribution by fiat.
Ummmm Reagan never had a congress controlled by his party. Instead he had to work with the Democrats to pass budgets.
So in reality the budget deficits of the 80s and early 90s were the result of Republicans Presidents working with a Democratic congress.
Whoops - Not having a balanced budget amendment was other mistake. And yes Craig, things would still get done - just not .gov comprising 30% of GDP like today.
I thought it was a horribly stupid short-sighted idea when the idiot repubs wanted to do it, and it's the same horribly stupid short-sighted idea now. Don't these guys ever ever learn: when you monkey around with the rules to benefit you when you're in power, it inevitably comes back to bite you in the ass when the other guy is in power and uses the advantages you created. Prime example: Massachusetts. If the dems had not monkeyed around with the rules when Romney was there, Brown would not be a senator now.
Funny how you simply define it as "abuse" when it's the other guys doing it.
I don't think it's been abused at all, I think it's working exactly as it should...
As I stated before, monkeying with the rules so you have more power when you have the majority seems like a wonderful idea, until a couple of years later things turn around and then people are bitching and whining about what the other party is doing. Leave the damn rule alone, it's been working fine for generations, and there's no compelling argument as to why it needs changed now. The parties just need to learn to work with each other instead of each one hardheadedly trying to ram through an extreme agenda that the "other side" can not vote for.
The republicans were whining about the dems "abusing" the filibuster before, and they threatened to use the nuclear option to stop it. Now the dems whine about the republicans "abusing" it. It's perfectly within the rules, it's worked fine forever, both sides do it, keep it as is.
That said, I don't know why Harkin is introducing a bill. There is no need for it to change this rule.
Jesus Christ on a crutch, can't we get any perspective?
The filibuster may be a good idea on occasion, but its never a good idea to use the filibuster as a 100% norm.
Read US history, never in US History has the filibuster been used as routinely by this recent GOP minority. Never never in US history.
Maybe point taken, during the LBJ era, dimocrats cranked bad legislation out with more thought on quantity than quality, so did GWB&co recently, but when we can't even crank out any quality legislation at all, the USA becomes sitting duck dinosaurs incapable of rational change. And instead we get cluster fuck counter adaptive compromises that are worse when we need the change we voted for in 2008.
The GOP may think of themselves as hero's, but I think they are a bunch of rascals that stand for nothing.
The frequency of use of the filibuster doesn't mean anything with regard to whether the system is working as designed or not. If 90% of the legislation one party wants to pass is crap, and the other party uses the filibuster to stop that 90% of stuff, that's a good thing. It's working as designed.
If the repubs simply sit there and use the filibuster on everything and the government does nothing, that's probably a good thing for all of us, that's when things go best. Gridlock in DC = good for the country, they can't screw things up further.
Besides, if the repubs just use the filibuster all the time, it's up to the public to punish them for doing so.
Changing the rules whenever you don't like how things turn out is a surefire way to screw things up.
The public tends not to hold them accountable for obstructionism. That doesn't mean it's not obstructionism, abusing the rules. The public elected them to 40 seats, not the majority.
Another point to note is that the fact that the minority party can filibuster anything at any time might be just the thing that forces the parties to compromise. If they know that no matter what they do, they can't ram something down the throat of the other side, they'll be forced to work with the other side to come up with something viable.
THey can't just force the majority to 'compromise' to 'something viable'. THey can force the majorit to not pass anything no matter how much they compromise. THey can force the majority to GUT the bill.
But you don't have a wor to say anout that, becase you prefer the straw man that all the Republicans want are very reasonable improvoements. THey'd NEVER abuse the rules.
Well if the legislation being pass is a streaming pile of shit, of course they have to filebuster it.
And if 90% of the legistlation the majority wants to pass is good, and the minority blocks all of it for the purpose of preventing them from having any progress to run on, you say it'sa working great.
Clueless.
I happen to disagree with Double Trouble, the filibuster may be a decent tactic to use rarely, but when its used all the time, its not such a good idea because it creates a tyranny of the minority and total grid lock where nothing can be done. The filibuster may have worked fine in the past but its current and total overuse threatens its purpose.
As it is, what the democrats lack is lock step party unity, so a decent balance of power is maintained as it is.
How about the Democrats stop trying to act like they know what is best for everyone?
Who put THEM in power, anyway?
How arrogant for them to expect that they have more power right now than 40 Republicans.
I'm sorry, but the minority PREVENTING the majority from passing laws which are not widely agreed upon is NOT tyranny.
In my opinion, the real tyranny here is the HUGE minority of Democratic Congressmen and Senators who think they can cram a healthcare bill down our throats that is universally unwanted. November will bear this out.
Again, if the legislation is so great, nothing it stopping those particular states form enacting legislation.
The Democrats are trying to act the part of the school yard bully.
No, you are excusing an abuse by trying to fore YOUR preference for not letting the Democrats act as the federal governemnt actually works, insteal limited to your fantasy of how you want it to.
If 90% of the legislature wanted to pass it, they could just pass a constitutional amendment.
Clueless.
Sounds like you are the one living in fantasy land as to how you want the federal government to work because you are the one bitching about the filibuster of health care "reform".
/Craig234
