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The Do-Nothing Senate
The House has delivered. It has done what in American politics today is all but impossible: It has passed a major bill.
Now health care goes to the Senate. The world's greatest deliberative body. The other side of Capitol Hill. Dithering Heights.
A catastrophic change has overtaken the Senate in recent years. Initially conceived as the body that would cool the passions of the House and consider legislation with a more Olympian perspective, the Senate has become a body that shuns debate, avoids legislative give-and-take, proceeds glacially and produces next to nothing.
The problem, in part, is that Republicans have routinized the filibuster. They have given their leader, Kentucky's Mitch McConnell, the power to bring virtually all legislation to a halt. Earlier this month, Senate Republicans blocked consideration of an extension of unemployment insurance. When they finally let it come to a vote, the measure passed 98 to 0.
Just flexing their muscles, mind you. Establishing a new normal: If we have anything to do with it, nothing moves. Unless you can get a 60-vote majority to end debate, all major bills (and some minor ones) are dead in the water.
While Republicans have become an immovable object, the Democrats have yet to find a way to become an irresistible force. They began the year with a president who had been elected by a substantial majority on a platform of urgent change, and with sizable majorities in both houses of Congress. They had been in this position twice before. The first time around, in 1933, Franklin Roosevelt and Congress had enacted the landmark legislation of the First Hundred Days -- depositor insurance, emergency relief, industrial stabilization, public employment (the Civilian Conservation Corps). The second time around, in 1965, Lyndon Johnson and Congress had created the Great Society, passing more than 80 bills, among them Medicare, the Voting Rights Act and federal aid to education, in six months.
In 2009, though, 10 months have come and gone, and of the president's major initiatives, only the emergency stimulus package has been enacted. Health care and climate change bills have passed the House but have yet to move in the Senate. Financial reform limps along in both chambers; proponents of labor law reform await a resolution of health care before taking this up again.
Why is 2009 so different from 1933 and 1965? For one thing, the Republicans are different. In 1933 and 1965, there were moderate and even liberal Republicans -- George Norris and Fiorello LaGuardia in 1933, Jacob Javits and Thomas Kuchel in 1965, to name a few -- who voted with the Democrats. Today, there are virtually no moderate Republicans. The GOP base has shrunk to the white South as Republicans have become uniformly conservative, and their elected officials deviate from radical-right orthodoxy at their peril.
The other reason is the decline of the Senate, where no measure of any substance can pass without the 60 votes needed to ensure movement. There are 58 Democrats and two independents who caucus with them. But Democrats have ditherers within their ranks.
At least three Democratic senators -- Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas, Louisiana's Mary Landrieu and Nebraska's Ben Nelson -- haven't even agreed to vote to permit health-care legislation to come to the floor. They may believe it's in their interest to come across as slowing down the process (which is already flowing with all the speed of molasses on a winter day). But it is surely not in the nation's interest to have one of its two legislative bodies dead set against legislating, which is the absurd reality the three are reinforcing.
Nor is it in the interest of their party. The Democrats and Obama supporters who flocked to the polls one year ago had reasonable expectations that the promise of change embodied in an Obama presidency and large congressional majorities would be real. Republicans understand that if they can keep the Democrats from delivering on that promise, as they did in the first two years of Bill Clinton's presidency, Democratic turnout in next year's midterm elections will collapse, as it did in Virginia and New Jersey last week. Why Democratic members of the Senate want to abet this process is beyond comprehension.
It's not only their party's interest that the Senate's balky Democrats are betraying. With each passing day, the Senate becomes more of a mockery of the principle of majority rule -- democracy's most fundamental precept. If Lincoln, Landrieu and Nelson are comfortable with the idea that elections shouldn't have consequences, they should say so publicly. If not, they should let the debate begin.
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25 Comments so far
Show Alljbentham
"For one thing, the Republicans are different."
"The other reason is the decline of the Senate, ..."
But the tertiam quid and the sine qua non has been the timidity and lack of intensive engagement of the president himself.
The Senate does not proceed "glacially" when it comes to passing a "defense" appropriation bill or things called "the Patriot Act," but it does proceed slowly, if at all, when it comes to national health care or help for the unemployed. Calling the Senate "the world's greatest deliberative body" is a bit of hyperbole, don't you think?
I agree that the Senate should not be called "the world's greatest deliberative body, but I loved him calling it "Dithering Heights". That was LOL funny to me.
To me what is really going in is that our government now exists pretty much solely to do the business of the rich and large corporations. The bank bailout flew through congress while legislation for the little guy doesn't. Unfortunately money has so corrupted the system I don't think it is fixable through normal electoral means.
Beyond bipartisan comprehension, indeed; but not beyond Bushist blackmail of ALL of DEM.
Beyond bipartisan comprehension, indeed; but not beyond Bushist blackmail of ALL of DEM.
The versions being debated have been so watered down and become so pro-industry that I would bet my last dollar that the Republicans in the Senate would vote for any of them if there were a Republican president and a Republican majority in Congress. There are innumerable different types of intelligence, and obviously Obama does not possess the type that enables one to be a successful politician, as he never comprehended that even if he were to manage to get a bill to the floor that Republicans could vote for (i.e., a bill that is far more pro-industry than pro-consumer), they would not for simply political reasons (the Republicans believe that passing a bill, any bill, would help Obama and the Democrats politically). And now Blue Dog Democrats and progressives will probably oppose the bill as well. Obama had a strong hand and he clearly misplayed it. That is what one-termers usually do.
The Democrats did the same thing this year that they did in 1994, playing on the Republican turf. They could correct that mistake by redefining the center so as to align it with the progressive ideology rather than continue to play by the Republican version of "center" that is aligned with the conservative ideology.
Democrats have become victims of their own "success." As the extreme right has taken control of the Republican party, it has driven "moderate" Republicans interested in protecting money interests, but not extreme social issues, into the Democratic Party. Doing so, these "moderates" resist change affecting economic class issues, but not on social issues. As a result, a 2/3 majority cannot generate enough votes to end a filibuster considering alteration of relative economic status.
The Senate is doing its job. They are supposed to "dither" They are supposed to reject garbage legislation like this health care bill or cap and trade or amnesty. These are all pieces of legislation that no American could or should vote for.
If they reject them they will have done their job protecting America from thieves.
If they pass them they will have betrayed their oath of office and the American people.
It really is as simple as that.
Yeah, because the Senate did a great job in passing TARP and giving Bush a free pass for his pet war, didn't they?
Only a capitalist with excessive wealth could come up with
such greedy principles as yours.
The problem goes to the Democratic leadership, not just in Congress but also, the DNC and Obama. The party has become so corrupt, bought out, and infactuated with holding on to power that the party doesn't stand for much. If Obama were interested in real change, he'd put his foot down and call for change and singularly call out those Democrats corrupting the system; however, as one can tell from his initial cabinet member picks, he isn't for change. On top of that, he is too timid to be a leader. Giving speeches doesn't make a leader.
"Democratic turnout in next year's midterm elections will collapse, as it did in Virginia and New Jersey last week. Why Democratic members of the Senate want to abet this process is beyond comprehension."
No, it is not beyond comprehension. The Democrats are not redefining the words moderate and independent to align with progressive values. Instead, they are relying on the GOP's version of the word "center". Nothing has changed since Bill Clinton has taken office. The Democrats have made the same mistake of playing on Republican turf and hoping to win. No progressives, liberals, Democrats, etc ... will win as long as they continue to play on their opponents' turf. This is the lesson that the Democratic Party will have to learn but will not. The same is true of the Green Party conceding to the Democratic Party rather than being a firm independent party.
The simple solution is to get rid of the filibuster, which just takes a majority vote of 50 plus Biden.
But then the Democrats would be expected to actually do stuff.
Here in Canada, as in all other countries with democratically-elected governments, the elected majority rules. Yet in the US, the modern day self-proclaimed fount of democracy, that basic principle does not prevail.
The filibuster, or even the threat of filibuster thwarts the basic principle.
So, why not do away with it? Apparently, since a vote on doing away with it is a "procedural" vote and only requires a simple majority, it would seem to be a relatively simple matter to take that step.
The Republican senators would howl, but it is my view that the US voting public would be hugely in favour of any parliamentary step that would end the present gridlock and allow Congress to function in anorderly manner.
The Senate was created as an elitist anti-Democratic body to thwart any legislation that the House might pass that did not conform to the elite's preferences.
We don't need a bi-cameral legislature in the first place. Even the House of Lords in the UK has become just ceremonial. Most modern democracies have a unicameral leg. or de-facto unicameral.
I believe it was a Madisonian idea to have the Senate to ensure that the ignorant and meddlesome outsiders and rabble did not get in the way of policy making by the wealthy elite.
Abolish the Senate
The undemocratic nature of the Senate feeds the conservative beast. All of those buckaroo states like South Dakota insist everyone should be able to carry firearms anywhere they want, no matter that their populations are a fraction of New York's or California's. But, the two votes of their Senators effectively cancels the votes of California's. Agricultural subsidies to agribusiness? You betcha. Federal water projects for the west--of course. Infrastructure spending on Amtrak--are you kidding? Military spending in Arkansas? Why not? A jobs program for Ohio? No way. And on it goes.
This country needs a new constitution. This eighteenth century patchwork just won't do the job anymore. But the greatest country in the world will never take the time to rewrite it. That would be a confession that we are not the greatest.
What's the surprise? For 50-plus years with the advent of television the push has been for a material culture with more is best, whether you need it or not; your body is really always sick or at risk for sickness, so eat these pills; your mind must be happy all the time, so eat these pills; work, shop or have sex until you drop; never think too deeply; load 1,000 songs on your new Blackberry or iPod or whatever and talk or text on your cell phone every spare minute; take baths with incense and candles all around the rim of your designer bathtub for your well-deserved relaxation; build a MacMansion and drink fine wine on the patio; ENJOY the perpetual prosperity, and get a heavy dose of Violence everyday on your television so you don't really get too bothered by casualties of war, which are rarely shown anyway on the controlled MSM; don't read and don't contemplate when you could be having FUN; even if one-third of the world is starving and half of them are getting massacred at that very instant, enjoy your FRITOS, TACOS and BEER while you watch the SUPER BOWL, etcetera.
Our Senate and House Members REPRESENT The People. Why shouldn't they be like us and want the best Material Life that the U.S. has to offer? Very few members of the House and Senate read the bills as they come through to vote on. That's a given. It's all to complicated.
Maybe a few reps read the pre-written-to-9/11 Patriot Act when it was rushed through for a vote. Ralph Nader offered $10,000 a pop if any of the reps would read the NAFTA legislation before it was voted on in Bill Clinton's Administration. Ralph, evidently, was only out $10,000 total.
The whole damn country is corrupted at every level, and curiosity? ... the genuine need to know what's going on? What's that? ...
Just listening to Inhofe on his rejection of scientifically-proven hypotheses and his projection of unproved Right-Wing theories on Climate Change or listening to the Deep South Republicans on various issues, their logic spells D-O-O-M. Yesterday on a radio talk show, a Right-wing politician said that Obama is not doing enough for Christians. Wonder what Constitution that guy swore to uphold.
So ... hey, ... What's the surprise?
Our Reps represent a healthy percentage of the faces and hearts of the good old U.S. of A. Has been that way since the deregulation orgies of the Reagan years and the carefully cultivated I-Me-&-My generation.
Those who make-up the electoral choices of the Democratic Party since 1980 have so little to do with the old-time Democrats, they wouldn't know how to talk to each other.
Get off this CD board and others similar to it and enter the mainstream discussions on AOL or other on-site discussions or any number of chat rooms, and it sounds and feels like another planet.
So, hey, our elected officals, including our new president, are corrupted, shallow, mealy-mouthed dolts with fat pocket books and lots of perks which they don't or won't want to give up. What's the surprise?
And it's all being controlled at a much higher level of Mega-Money and Old-Time elites and aristocracy.
I'll be glad to be slapped down by one or more of you defending the majority of the population of the U.S. of A.
A little light at the end of this tunnel would be a good thing right about now.
an uneasy peace, cm
CM;Throw me out some sites and will see.Thank you,Tony
Tony - Don't know what you mean by "Throw me out some sites and will see."
/cm
Nanoo
Well written discription of the in general US population. The genuine need to know what is going on, absolutely is missing. Here I think the readers of Commondreams, pursue the truth. You go about trying to share your findings and people in general turn a deaf ear. Why, they don't want to be bothered and hasn't it ALWAYS been like this. Once in a while you might even get there advice of, you shouldn't dwell on that, or you think too much.
peace, N
Hard to see through the smokescreen isn't it?
The "war" (if you want to call an illegal occupation and attempted genocide a war) is the real issue and has been since we started attacking other nations for no reason.
The "Health Care Reform" is nothing but a smokescreen to hide the war machine.
Obama is following the bush agenda step for step. He's even managed to increase troops in Afghanistan while America squabbles over this idiotic health care issue.
The only significant difference between Obama and bush is that Obama hides his war crimes and Zionist profiteering behind a smokescreen while bush came right out in the open with it.
How many thousands of lives are being lost while Obama begiles America with his health care issue?
Like Hitler's cabinet, Mitch McConnell proves there is no more self-righteous, reactionary and dangerous regressive as a guilt ridden, conservative, closeted homosexual trying to appear super hawkish and testosteronic. Same with Orrin, Sessions, Lindsey, Armey, Bennett and according to a recent documentary, half the Republican Congress and some conservative Dems.
No change to them means they'll never have to leave the closet and be seen as dreaded, Godless liberals. Their angst, self-hate and doubts will be kept from a punishing God and their traditional Leave it to Beaver families.
CAPITALISM ---- INTELLIGENCE DICTATORSHIP
We have a capitalist Constitution which reads, “All men are created equal.”
Greatest líe the world has ever known, as it creates the illusion that we
are all equal to the super-intelligent rich, and that we all deserve to be rich.
The result being capitalism, the unregulated freedom to compete against
those less intellígent, to enrích ourselves upon the gríef of those less
fortunate, and to cause starving children by hoárding excessive wealth.
Truth is, we are all given a different level of intelligence as a test,
to see if we pass our excess down to those less intelligent where
it belongs.
If you believe what you say is true, I guess you got the short end of the stick, too bad. What you say amounts to racism and social Darwinism. Is the stereotypical person from Alabama a racist? You should be relieved that you are dead wrong.
We are not treated equally because of race, class, wealth and power. Your un-scientific assessment is not supported by the facts.
People who believe in fairy-tales don't need facts or science.