By David Boaz on 4.25.05 @ 12:06AM
It could be a Dr. Seuss story: Red team, blue team, my team, your team.
It could be a Dr. Seuss story: Red team, blue team, my team,
your team. Both Democrats and Republicans have flip-flopped on the
use of the filibuster because the once solidly Democratic Senate
now looks to be firmly Republican.
Republicans who once extolled the virtues of divided power and
the Senate's role in slowing down the rush to judgment now demand
an end to delays in approving President Bush's judicial nominees.
President Bush says the Democrats' "obstructionist tactics are
unprecedented, unfair, and unfaithful to the Senate's
constitutional responsibility to vote on judicial nominees."
Democrats who now wax eloquent about a "rubber stamp of
dictatorship" replacing "the rights to dissent, to unlimited debate
and to freedom of speech" in the Senate not too long ago sought to
eliminate the filibuster altogether.
In 1993 the distinguished Democratic lawyer Lloyd Cutler,
counsel to President Jimmy Carter and later to President Bill
Clinton, argued that the Senate could change the cloture rule by
majority vote, just as Republicans argue today. In 1994 leading
liberal ex-politicians launched the "Action, Not Gridlock!"
campaign to stop filibusters against Clinton's legislative agenda
and nominees. In 1996 nine current Democratic senators sought to
declare that all filibusters unconstitutionally infringe on
majority rule.
When Republicans balked at some of President Clinton's nominees,
Democrats spoke forcefully about the injustice of it all. "An
up-or-down vote, that is all we ask," said Sen. Tom Daschle in
1999. "Our institutional integrity requires an up-or-down vote,"
said Sen. Dianne Feinstein the same year. "If our Republican
colleagues don't like them, vote against them. But give them a
vote," said Sen. Edward M. Kennedy in 1998.
It's not just partisan politicians who switch sides. The New
York Times editorialized in 1995, "Now is the perfect
moment...to get rid of an archaic rule that frustrates democracy
and serves no useful purpose." Nine years later the Times
discovered that useful purpose: "The filibuster...is a rough
instrument that should be used with caution. But its existence goes
to the center of the peculiar but effective form of government
America cherishes." The Times did have the good grace to
note, "To see the filibuster fully, it's obviously a good idea to
have to live on both sides of it.... We hope that acknowledging our
own error may remind some wavering Republican senators that someday
they, too, will be on the other side and in need of all the
protections the Senate rules can provide."
Likewise, E. J. Dionne Jr. of the Washington Post and
the Brookings Institution groused about the "anti-majoritarian
filibuster rules" that were preventing needed action in 1998 but
warned in 2005 that ending the filibuster would be "a radical
departure" that "would be disastrous for minority rights."
Immediately after her election to the Senate in 2000, Hillary
Rodham Clinton said she was proud "to be on the side of the
democratic process working" by calling for an end to the
anti-majoritarian Electoral College. Today she staunchly supports
the Democrats' effort to prevent "the democratic process" from
working in the Senate.
Back in 1993, Cutler wrote, "A strong argument can be made that
its requirements of 60 votes to cut off debate and a two-thirds
vote to amend the rules are both unconstitutional." Former Senate
Republican leader and Reagan White House chief of staff Howard
Baker responded, "Doing away with super-majority votes...would
topple one of the pillars of American democracy: the protection of
minority rights from majority rule. The Senate is the only body in
the federal government where these minority rights are fully and
specifically protected. It was designed for that purpose by
America's Founders."
Republicans were right in those days. They should take advantage
of the Democrats' being right today and return to protecting the
rights of the minority. No party holds a majority forever, and some
day Republican senators will need to use the filibuster again to
stop big-government legislation and slow down a Democratic
president's most liberal nominees.
topics:
Constitution, Law, NATO