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Are you cool with Republicans changing the law to get what they want?
They want to significantly reduce the number of votes required in the Senate to pass things to a number closer to that which they have so they won't have to deal with disagreeing Democrats. This is essential to give George Bush everything he wants.
Check out CSPAN2 for the arguments currently going on from both sides. If you're away from a TV it's streaming on http://www.cspan.org |
Guess I'm the only one around here not cool with this :upsidedow
They come back from a recess to continue the debate in about 15 minutes. |
Republican math:
51% should be 100% |
its inevitable, they have the majority and now they're using it. I just like how they're trying to make it sound so simple. .. we just want a simple "up and down vote", when in reality they're really rewritting the rules to work in their favor.
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Filibuster and Cloture
Using the filibuster to delay or block legislative action has a long history. The term filibuster -- from a Dutch word meaning "pirate" -- became popular in the 1850s, when it was applied to efforts to hold the Senate floor in order to prevent a vote on a bill. In the early years of Congress, representatives as well as senators could filibuster. As the House of Representatives grew in numbers, however, revisions to the House rules limited debate. In the smaller Senate, unlimited debate continued on the grounds that any senator should have the right to speak as long as necessary on any issue. In 1841, when the Democratic minority hoped to block a bank bill promoted by Kentucky Senator Henry Clay, he threatened to change Senate rules to allow the majority to close debate. Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton rebuked Clay for trying to stifle the Senate's right to unlimited debate. Three quarters of a century later, in 1917, senators adopted a rule (Rule 22), at the urging President Woodrow Wilson, that allowed the Senate to end a debate with a two-thirds majority vote, a device known as "cloture." The new Senate rule was first put to the test in 1919, when the Senate invoked cloture to end a filibuster against the Treaty of Versailles. Even with the new cloture rule, filibusters remained an effective means to block legislation, since a two-thirds vote is difficult to obtain. Over the next five decades, the Senate occasionally tried to invoke cloture, but usually failed to gain the necessary two-thirds vote. Filibusters were particularly useful to Southern senators who sought to block civil rights legislation, until cloture was invoked after a fifty-seven day filibuster against the Civil Right Act of 1964. In 1975, the Senate reduced the number of votes required for cloture from two-thirds to three-fifths, or sixty of the current one hundred senators. Many Americans are familiar with the filibuster conducted by Jimmy Stewart, playing Senator Jefferson Smith in Frank Capra's film Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, but there have been some famous filibusters in the real-life Senate as well. During the 1930s, Senator Huey P. Long effectively used the filibuster against bills that he thought favored the rich over the poor. The Louisiana senator frustrated his colleagues while entertaining spectators with his recitations of Shakespeare and his reading of recipes for "pot-likkers." Long once held the Senate floor for fifteen hours. The record for the longest individual speech goes to South Carolina's J. Strom Thurmond who filibustered for 24 hours and 18 minutes against the Civil Rights Act of 1957. |
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law is that the people you vote in say it is.
that's why elected political positions have real POWER. duuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu |
what pisses me off about it is how the republicans were using these same filibusters a few years back to block some of bill clinton's nominees, but now they don't think it's right to use them. fucking hypocrits.
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Well, you thought it was bad then and you think is ok now. |
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2257 may be the top concern of the moment for the adult industry, but there's really a lot going on lately in the US that's simply not good for democracy - it's really disturbing to watch people like this try to tear down the systems of checks and balances that keep the branches of government in align with one another, and even more disturbing is that most people don't even understand what it is they're trying to do, or the danger that could come from it.
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While I agree that a good system of checks and balances in imperative in our government, I probably disagree with you on what is happening now. I think that information has become more readily available and consumed by the citizens that were not partaking in the political process in the past. As a result, one party is slowing loosing credibility with the public on various issues. So much so, that party has found itself in the minority and heading the wrong way. It is because people understand MORE that the changes are happening, not becuase they dont understand at all. I do see a future system of checks and balances being in place, I just predict more of a division in one current party that brings the checks and balances than the two parties that we know now. |
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Removing the fillibuster would seriously damage any minority party's ability to block legislation they find particularly objectionable, allowing for simple majority rule voting. The drawbacks are that a simple majority would be able to seize power by the removal of this check and balance procedure, the founding fathers made rules of checks and balances to prevent just this sort of one party domination of the country, by allowing a minor majority party to use their minor majority to rewrite the rules of procedure at any time to suit their own liking willresult in the consolidation of power only to the ruling party and giving the ruling party the ability to write laws and legislation that could then be used to favor only the ruling party. This is very dangerous territory since one party will always have a one vote majority or better in the senate
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First of all, we are using the term checks and balances wrong. The system of checks and balances is not supposed to allow minority senators to get their way and oppose the majority. The system of checks and balances refers to the different branches of government. The checks and balances system that keeps one branch, ie. the president from "ruling" in a way that is not in the best interest of the people is for the people to vote on and elect senators to represent them. The senate vote is the check and balance of another branch of government. What if their were 99 senators from one party and 1 from the opposing party? Should that one senator be allowed to stop the progress of the other 99 senators? The same thing is happening, just that the numbers are different. However we want to say it, what is happening is that a minority of Americans are holding the government hostage and not allowing the senators we elected to do their jobs we elected them to do. |
i haven't been cool with anything republicans have done for a couple decades now.
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Yea, the fucked up that cold war thing bigtime! |
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this whole thing is just a big mess waiting to happen. First off bush has put up 218 judges for appointment. 208 of them have been approved. 10 were not. After his reelection he put those same 10 back up and they were again stopped. By comparison the reubs blocked about 60 of clintons nominees. But that is not the case ( who had more blocked ) the repubs are pissed they are getting thier way so they want to change the rules. If they do this the dems have already said they will flood the congress with thier agenda. In the past congress has always worked on a certian system when it comes to setting the agenda on what will be voted on. That is that the party in the majority sets the agenda. There are many rules and things that will allow the minority group to force thier agenda. That is what the dems will do. They have already said that they will use all the rules and fine print to slow down commitees and force thier agenda on the congress. So if the repubs do this, they will get thier vote on these 10 judges but in the end they will start a much bigger fight that will all but bring congress to a hault.
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yes the congress is there to check the president so that he can't just sign whatever he wants into law. But when the majority of the congress is repub and the president is repub then basically that makes this check non-existant. The check is in place to allow that the minority has a voice. if there are 99 repubs and 1 dem ( or reversed ) and that 1 lone senetor fillibusters so that he can be heard, then he must be heard and some kind of a concession must be at least approached. That is what happened here. The dems have offered to basically approve 3 of these judges in exchange for the some give on the repub side. But the repubs what it all or none. We are allowing the senetors we elected to do thier job. I'm from a state that elected democrats. That would mean they are representing a more liberal constiuancy and by fighting against the current majority they are doing exactly what we elected them to do.. Just because you are the minority does not mean you should be voiceless. |
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this is an extreme situation but is that a majority, no matter how small, having absolute power? |
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I think you would be surprised at the success rate of clinton nomiations relative to historical rates. Also do some research on the democratic response to some of the failures. |
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http://mediamatters.org/items/200505180004 |
I'm not arguing republican or democrat on this one, I just think you guys are not understanding the system of checks and balances.
Assuming checks and balances pertained to the political affiliations inside the senate instead of the branches of goverment, you guys are taking away that checks and balances system by giving power to a minority. You are giving power to someone who opposes the majority of the people in the country and making the majority of elected officials powerless. Thats not in the best interest of the people. It seems lately that people want to change the meaning of majority. When a group of people make a decision based on a majority vote, it would be nice if all agreed and the vote was unanimous, but the fact is that in a majority vote, 51% = the same result as 99%. We dont let John Kerry make presidental decisions becuase he got alot of votes. |
I expected another 2257 thread
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Clinton?s eight-year appellate confirmation rate was 74%, in addition to getting two liberals confirmed to the Supreme Court. He was able to have 377 of his nominees confirmed?five short of the all-time record. He lost one floor vote for a nominee to the district court. And when the Senate adjourned for the last time under his presidency, there were only 67 vacancies and only 41 nominations expired without action. Overall, that is a good record. |
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This is much more important:2 cents: |
We are actually comparing apples to oranges.
Remember, Clinton didn't have a majority for most of his terms and knew that going into the nomination process. |
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say 55 of the 100 senetors are repubs. There is a democrat in the white house who, like clinton, got about 40% of the vote in a three way race but won the electoral college. The senate writes a bill and passes it 55 to 45 and sends it to the white house. the president vetos the bill. the senate can now override his veto with a 2/3 votes but can't get enough votes so the bill dies. this is a great case of the minority ruling. the majority of the states elected a republican senator. Only 40% of the people in the country voted for the president, but that minority wins. The checks and balances system is not in place to assure that the majority rules, it is there to make sure the process is fair and that no one branch can run roughshot over the government. |
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When groups start changing the system itself to expand their power or to win on specific issues, the stability that is the aim of a system of balance is threatened. |
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A summary of your response would be the change the definition of "majority". |
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