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GOP Filibuster Record: Republicans Using Obstruction Tool With Astonishing Frequency

STEVEN R. HURST   03/ 1/10 02:03 PM ET   AP

Gop Filibuster

WASHINGTON — The filibuster – tool of obstruction in the U.S. Senate – is alternately blamed and praised for wilting President Barack Obama's ambitious agenda. Some even say it's made the nation ungovernable.

Maybe, maybe not. Obama's term still has three years to run.

More certain, however: Opposition Republicans are using the delaying tactic at a record-setting pace.

"The numbers are astonishing in this Congress," says Jim Riddlesperger, political science professor at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth.

The filibuster, using seemingly endless debate to block legislative action, has become entrenched like a dandelion tap root in the midst of the shrill partisanship gripping Washington.

But the filibuster is nothing new. Its use dates to the mists of Senate history, but until the civil rights era, it was rarely used.

A tactic unique to the Senate, the filibuster means a simple majority guarantees nothing when it comes to passing laws.

"The rules of the Senate are designed to give muscle to the minority," said Senate historian Donald Ritchie.

With the Senate now made up of 100 members, two for each of the 50 states, an opposition filibuster can only be broken with 60 votes – a three-fifths majority.

As a matter of political philosophy, the concept of the filibuster arises from a deep-seated, historic concern among Americans that the minority not be steamrolled by the majority.

It is a brake and protective device rooted in the same U.S. political sensibility that gave each state two senators regardless of population.

The same impulse gave Americans the Electoral College in presidential contests – a structure from earliest U.S. history designed to give smaller population states greater influence in choosing the nation's leader.

Given recent use of the filibuster by minority Republicans and the party's success in snarling the legislative process in this Congress, Democrats say the minority has gone way beyond just protecting its interests.

The frequency of filibusters – plus threats to use them – are measured by the number of times the upper chamber votes on cloture. Such votes test the majority's ability to hold together 60 members to break a filibuster.

In the 110th Congress of 2007-2008, with Republicans in the minority, there were a record 112 cloture votes. In the current session of Congress – the 111th – for all of 2009 and the first two months of 2010 the number already exceeds 40. The most the filibuster has been used when Democrats were in the minority was 58 times in the 106th Congress of 1999-2000.

During most of Obama's first year in office and for a few weeks this year, 58 Democratic senators and two Independents who normally vote with them held a filibuster-proof 60-seat majority in the Senate.

That vanished last month when Massachusetts Republican Scott Brown captured the seat of the late Sen. Ted Kennedy, who died last summer.

Most notably, Brown's victory has stymied Obama's push to overhaul health care just as the bill was approaching the finish line. Before Brown's election, both the Senate and the House of Representatives had passed separate versions of the reform legislation.

Brown broke the Democratic 60-seat majority before the two chambers could meld differences in their bills for a final vote in both houses.

However, one of Brown's first votes after taking office saw him joining four other Republicans to help Democrats break a threatened filibuster by his party's leaders against a job bill.

The measure, $13 billion in tax incentives for businesses to hire unemployed workers, was quickly passed the next day with 12 Republicans joining Brown and 55 Democrats in favor of it.

Filibusters to make the Obama administration and Democrats in Congress look inept are one thing. Quite another is a vote against creating jobs in an economy with nearly 10 percent unemployment and midterm elections nine months away.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE – Steven R. Hurst reports from the White House for The Associated Press and has covered international relations for 30 years.

___

On the Net:

http://www.senate.gov

(This version CORRECTS the number of filibusters in the 16th paragraph.)

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WASHINGTON — The filibuster – tool of obstruction in the U.S. Senate – is alternately blamed and praised for wilting President Barack Obama's ambitious agenda. Some even say it's mad...
WASHINGTON — The filibuster – tool of obstruction in the U.S. Senate – is alternately blamed and praised for wilting President Barack Obama's ambitious agenda. Some even say it's mad...
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06:41 PM on 04/04/2010
- Previous Democratic record high, 104th Congress, which takes place over a two year period, 1995-96: 50 filibusters

- Current GOP record - which is the all time high for both parties in the past 50 years, 111th Congress, 2009-10, but we've only had 2 months of 2010 so far: 152 filibuster. If you add in ten more months at the current rate of 20 filibuster per month, that's 200 more filibusters this year, coming to a grand total of 352 filibusters this year.

352 estimated filibusters for this Congress, compared to the previous Democratic record, of 50 filibusters. That's 700% more, or 7x more than the previous record, 7x more than the Dems did it 15 years ago.
06:35 PM on 04/04/2010
Last year, the first of the 111th Congress, there were a record 112 cloture votes. In the first two months of 2010, the number already exceeds 40.

That means, with 10 months left to run in the 111th Congress, Republicans have turned to the filibuster or threatened its use at a pace that will more than triple the old record.
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12:35 AM on 03/03/2010
The Republicans were whining too when their judicial nominees were being held up by the Democrats. If they really wanted to change the rules about filibustering they would have done it long ago. But both sides see it as an ace in the hole so it will remain.

The Dems had a golden opportunity to push for the elimination of the Electoral College after Gore lost the electoral vote in 2000. But they never mounted a push for it because one day they may receive the same benefit of taking the electoral vote while losing the popular vote.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LeLoup
Res ipsa loquitur, ergo tace!
03:03 PM on 03/02/2010
"Filibusters to make the Obama administration and Democrats in Congress look inept are one thing. Quite another is a vote against creating jobs in an economy with nearly 10 percent unemployment and midterm elections nine months away."

I cannot fathom a Republican in Congress that would even care about the plight of ordinary Americans.
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Horus45
Liberal Activist, anti-Fascist
01:43 PM on 03/02/2010
"During most of Obama's first year in office and for a few weeks this year, 58 Democratic senators and two Independents who normally vote with them held a filibuster-proof 60-seat majority in the Senate."

Not true, you are forgetting how long it took to seat Al Franken!
06:36 PM on 04/04/2010
Plus the fact that democrats do not vote in lockstep the way republicans do
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
SwingingFromCenter
11:21 AM on 03/02/2010
A shining example of why the 2 party system doesn't work. Any truly functional government needs at least 3.
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AmericanDreamWarrior
My progressive liberal site www.foksociety.com
11:04 AM on 03/02/2010
I don't believe in the traditional sense of He-ll, but not only do I bless these republican men and women of the senate with the karma they deserve, every single last one of them that is using the nations misery to score points with their base. And I hope that if there is no he-ll, that the universe creates one just for these people (and lobbyists, of course, that br!be politicians for the corporations best interests at our expense).

What would this he-ll be like?

Every consequence that their political game playing and acting to serve their personal agendas has wrought on the public, they would spend eternity experiencing. This also includes every democrat that falls under the same guidelines. Oh and a very special place Lieberman!

Or is that too mean even for them?
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10:54 AM on 03/02/2010
"We're NO. one.
We're NO. one
We're NO. one"

Chants the republicans.
ladyearth
Give birth to your dancing star
09:18 AM on 03/02/2010
Folks, can you hear what the Republicans are saying? They are pulling a "Gingrich." Gingrich shut down the federal government, too, remember? If you are unemployed, the Republicans believe that those unemployment benefits entice you to not look for work. Do you hear that? These Republican rich old white men have no idea who the American are. We, the people of the United States of America, provide, through our tax dollars, these Republican rich old white men with excellent access to health care for them and their loved ones. These Republican rich old white men are saying to you that you and your loved ones, your kids, your spouse, your mom, your dad, do not deserve the excellent access to health care that we, the American people, provide for them. Do you hear what the Republicans are saying? If you are unemployed, Senator Bunning (Ky Republican) says, in his words, "Tough sh-t." If you or your loved ones, your kids, your spouse, your mom, your dad, needs access to health care, the Republicans choose to protect corporate profits and those multi-million CEOs, instead. They do not care about the deficit. They passed the Medicare Advantage plans and the drug prescription plans WITHOUT any funding. The Republicans are in an all out effort to ordain and establish the Corporate States of America and they will not let the pain of the American people stand in their way.
10:30 AM on 03/02/2010
Great post!
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12:44 AM on 03/03/2010
"If you are unemployed, Senator Bunning (Ky Republican) says, in his words, 'Tough sh-t.'"

Senator Bunning had no intention of ever halting funding for any of it. He was making a valid point, albeit in a hypocritical way. If President Obama wanted and Congress passed the "pay-go" legislation, when is it ever going to be used? Congress cannot find a mere ten billion out of another account to pay for these projects - when will they ever start taking accountability and quit increasing the debt? Bunning picked this particular legislation because of all the furor it would create. Now if he had just had the same conviction in the past that he seems to have now...
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StillAmused
Some mayo on that troll, please...
06:26 AM on 03/02/2010
They'd originally contemplated individually holding their breath indefinitely, but one of the MDs in the gang explained the likely consequences.
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04:38 AM on 03/02/2010
The picture - GRUMPY OLD MEN.
Time to retire these obstructionists.
01:58 AM on 03/02/2010
With all the socialism comments, I would like to make a point. I was raised by socialist, in a socialist town, right here in the usa. My family, half still in Denmark, have been socialist since Lenin. (Denmark and Lenin did not like each others socialism structure so there is more than one type) My grandfather knew ronald reagan, they both lived in socialist towns, in fact they both retired by a socialist town outside of santa barbara! Reagan was not afraid of socialists, not al all.

Socialism is just that, a system run by society, there is no government take over and capitalism is often blended in with socialist societies. Read Marx's communist manifesto so you know what it is you hate (you are brain washed if you hate something you do not understand.) It is rather funny when you find out what is actually meant by government takeover; it involved the guillotine and muskets. Yes, marx loved our american revolution and considered it a socialist take over from the king.

Capitalists will say anything to make a buck and it is naive to think that an economic system is flawless and functions like a religion. If we can pool our resources to protect our country, we can do so to protect our nations health. It is fiscally conservative to buy in bulk.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
keepemhonest
01:39 AM on 03/02/2010
I do not H8 TeabaggingGOPers ... I just look forward to their KARMA catching up to them.
09:48 AM on 03/02/2010
Tea Partiers and the GOP aren't the same thing, they are separate. Among other things, the Tea Party is ticked off at Gov'ts out-of-control spending, whether the R's or D's are doing it. Both R's and D's are courting the Tea Party, because this movement is still on the rise. Just look at Nancy Pelosi now trying to cozy up to the Tea Party movement, if you don't believe me.
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10:12 AM on 03/02/2010
Don't fool yourself, a large percentage of the Tea partiers came from the republican party. They may not be the same, but they are similar enough. In the end, they will return to the republican party or possible force it to split. Either way is fine by me.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AmericanDreamWarrior
My progressive liberal site www.foksociety.com
10:46 AM on 03/02/2010
With all due respect I don't believe your concept of what the TRers represent is entirely accurate. Although after much reading and researching I've yet to find one conscise platform as it varies from chapter to chapter but there are a few ideas that kinda transit through most of the chapters.

-No gun laws
-Right to religion in govt
-End womens right to choose
-Small govt
-Full capitalism with no govt restriction
-No healthcare
-Less than 10% taxation, if that
-No diversity and racial fears
-No spending, except for military and emergency services and do away with all social saftey nets no more social safty nets, except for medicare, the rest can go but I think... think libraries and infrastructure repair are exempt, not 100% on that.
-And of course, the praying of Obamas failure regardless of what it does to country.

I know I've left some stuff out but how different is this from the current republican platform?
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
keepemhonest
01:38 AM on 03/02/2010
Remember

ALL GOP males voted AGAINST the Anti-R A P E amendment.
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ThankGodhesgone
Always Progressive and loving the CONs meltdown.
11:29 PM on 03/01/2010
Sorry folks, my typing is awful tonight.