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Returning the Senate to Majority Rule
Standing at the edge of the health care precipice, President Barack Obama has reached a defining point in his presidency. The recent news that Anthem Blue Cross is planning to jack up individual premiums as much as 40 percent is just the latest example of our flailing health care system.
But beyond the immediate health care crisis a more fundamental national principle is at stake in the health care vote. And it affects not only health care but also pending legislation on global climate change, re-regulation of the financial industry, and more. That is the notion that the majority should rule. If Senate Republicans insist on abusing the quirky rules of the Senate, such as the filibuster which requires 60 out of 100 votes to end debate and vote on legislation, President Obama should push his health care package through the Senate via the "reconciliation process."
Reconciliation, which would allow 51 out of 100 Senators to pass health care legislation, would restore the constitutional principle of "majority rule" that has been hijacked in the filibuster-gone-wild Senate. Nowhere is it written in the Constitution that a supermajority is required to pass legislation in the Senate. Indeed, the Constitution requires the use of supermajority rules by one or both houses of Congress in only seven specific situations (including overriding a presidential veto, confirming treaties, removing a president or other leaders who have been impeached by the House). But the filibuster rule is not among them.
The Constitution's drafters clearly knew how to impose a supermajority rule when they wanted to, yet they didn't impose one for ending debate in the Senate. Various constitutional scholars have concluded that ordinary majority rule is the Constitution's default baseline, except in those seven explicit instances.
The filibuster rule is merely a peculiarity of antiquated Senate tradition, part of an anti-majoritarian streak that once protected a minority of slaveholding states. Such anti-majoritarianism was opposed by leading constitutional figures. James Madison and Alexander Hamilton warned about the creation of any legislative body which "contradicts the fundamental maxim of republican government, which requires that the sense of the majority should prevail" (Hamilton, Federalist Paper number 22).
The problem with supermajority thresholds, as Hamilton and Madison pointed out, is that they allow a rump minority to exercise a veto over what the vast majority wants. Currently the 41 Republican senators represent barely a third of the nation's populace. Yet through the filibuster they can strangle any legislation favored by senators representing the other two-thirds. The resulting paralysis and gridlock undermines the Senate's credibility.
Very few national legislatures require a supermajority to pass legislation, though one comparable situation we can point to is in California. There, a two-thirds legislative supermajority is required to pass a budget or alter revenues, and also has resulted in paralysis.
Not only should Obama and congressional Democrats invoke reconciliation, they should retire the anti-majoritarian filibuster to the dustbin of history. Some political leaders believe that doing so would require 67 votes, and if you can't get 60 votes to end a filibuster how could you possibly get 67 votes to change the Senate rule that established the filibuster?
But law professor Vikram Amar and other legal experts have concluded that only a Senate majority is necessary to abolish the filibuster. The Constitution allows the Senate or the House to "determine the rules of its proceedings" by a simple majority vote. The rule establishing the filibuster itself was passed by only a majority, and a bare majority of an earlier Senate cannot legally bind future Senates to a two-thirds vote. To try and do so, writes Prof. Amar, "would be in violation of deep constitutional and American values."
Another possibility would be to reform the filibuster, as proposed by Democratic Senator Tom Harkin from Iowa. Senator Harkin would allow the debate-ending requirement to be lowered gradually the longer a measure is debated. Initially ending debate might require 60 votes, but after a few days of debate it would be re-set at 57 votes. Days later, the requirement would be lowered to 54, and so forth. "In that way, a bare majority could not circumvent discussion and deliberation at the outset, but neither could a recalcitrant minority hold up majoritarian action indefinitely," writes Professor Amar.
So by either using reconciliation, modifying the filibuster, or getting rid of it entirely, President Obama would return the Senate to the original "majority rule" vision of Madison and Hamilton. And he would pass health care legislation that will allow millions of fellow Americans to benefit from a level of health care security already enjoyed by the president and the senators.
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6 Comments so far
Show AllWhat is the point of this article? what does:
"The recent news that Anthem Blue Cross is planning to jack up individual premiums as much as 40 percent"
have to do with:
" President Obama should push his health care package through the Senate via the "reconciliation process." "
The Democrat bill does nothing to prevent Blue Cross from "jacking up" premiums.
Extending jlock123's commentary, the vacuous nature of legal argument is revealed in the comment,
"The rule establishing the filibuster itself was passed by only a majority, and a bare majority of an earlier Senate cannot legally bind future Senates to a two-thirds vote. To try and do so, writes Prof. Amar, 'would be in violation of deep constitutional and American values.'"
When majority rule must be defended on the basis of "deep constitutional and American values," you know something is rotten. When requiring a defense on values, not law or Constitutional provision, majority rule is shown not intrinsic to U.S. tradition.
Contemporary libertarians illustrate this when claiming "government can't do anything right." Democracy being a form of government, then it "can't do anything right." Thus, libertarians defend some amorphous "republicanism" which appears rife with the "checks-and-balances" manifest in the filibuster rule. Now, although this amorphous "republicanism" appears some form of government itself, and thus "can't do anything right," this is beside the point.
To the point is the hostility to democracy exhibited by libertarians. Revealed is democracy is NOT among "deep . . . American values." Democracy is a value which must be fought for again and again in this country. Advocates of the neo-classicism of the "discipline" of economics are advocates of the bourgeois feudalism of mercantilism, and libertarians are advocates of the individualistic predestination theology of Adam Smith's classical Scottish Presbytarianism. John Adams and Alexander Hamilton represent the former, while William Jennings Bryan and Ron Paul the latter.
Democracy is alien to all these individuals, and their contemporary descendants. It must be fought for constantly.
Well, some ignorant, ill-written and uninformed articles like this slip pass the editors sometimes.
Actually this is right on the money. His example of California's disaster is spot on.
I particularly like Harkin's idea. It doesn't disenfranchise the minority totally but it doesn't let them paralyze the process either.
And philandril, he does make the point vis: both the Constitution and the Law. And I don't know where you grew up, but Majority Rule has been a core tradition in this country for ever. So much so that minority populations have had to fight for their rights, or did you miss that?
And where did the libertarians come into this?
Correction:
The American people can't seem to elect a government that does anything right.
Promise:
This will remain that way, so long as the choices are GOP and Democrat ahem, GOP with another name.
Come on. The Senate has been majority rule. The Democrats have been pretending.
The 0bamists made no move towards reconciliation until they convinced themselves that they had scrapped single payer, public option, and anything else that might liberate Americans from insurance parasites.
If we cannot kill the bill, we must fire the incumbents.