For the last few years, congressional Republicans would cry “obstructionism!” at the drop of a hat. Any effort to stand in the way of the president’s agenda in Congress was outrageous, offensive, and possibly even unconstitutional. What mattered, more than anything, was preserving the notion of majority rule. To filibuster was to be un-American.
That was then. Have you noticed how the GOP has suddenly rediscovered its appreciation for standing in the way of the majority?
Back when he was in the Senate majority, Kentucky’s Mitch McConnell thought it was pretty outrageous that Democrats were using the threat of filibusters to set up a 60-vote requirement for the confirmation of a handful of George W. Bush’s judicial nominees. McConnell called the Democrats’ tactics an “ugly denial” of “fundamental fairness” that was “unprecedented in the history of the country” and would cause “great damage” to the U.S. Senate.
Now that the Republicans are in the minority, it turns out that using filibusters to force 60-vote cloture votes is nothing other than standard operating procedure. The Senate is set to debate competing anti-escalation resolutions next week, and McConnell tells MSNBC that all of them “are likely, as virtually everything in the Senate is likely, to be subject to a 60-vote threshold.”
Remind me, what was that the GOP was saying about “obstructionism”?
Yesterday, Republicans filibustered a minimum-wage increase, even though a majority of senators supported it, the House already passed it, and the measure enjoyed broad bipartisan support across the country. No matter, GOP senators said, this was no time for an up-or-down vote.
Soon, many of those same Republicans will also explain that they’re afraid of a non-binding resolution on the president’s escalation policy, so this can’t have an up-or-down vote either. Again, bipartisan support isn’t enough — McConnell & Co. want 60 votes.
They’re off to a good start, aren’t they? Less than a month into the 110th Congress, the GOP caucus has delivered two high-profile filibusters on two measures with broad support, both of which would pass if brought to the floor for a vote.
If I didn’t know better, I might think the Republicans were suddenly afraid of majority rule. That couldn’t be, could it?