Daily Archives: January 14, 2010


Thomas Geoghegan argues (persuasively) that the filibuster is unconstitutional 3

In Thomas Geoghegan’s 11 January 2010 op-ed in the NY Times (Mr. Smith Rewrites the Constitution) argues that the Senate’s use of the filibuster subverts the U.S. Constitution and the intent of our Founding Fathers.

[T]he Senate, as it now operates, really has become unconstitutional: as we saw during the recent health care debacle, a 60-vote majority is required to overcome a filibuster and pass any contested bill. The founders, though, were dead set against supermajorities as a general rule, and the ever-present filibuster threat has made the Senate a more extreme check on the popular will than they ever intended.  (…)

[The filibuster is] a revision of Article I itself: not used to cut off debate, but to decide in effect whether to enact a law. The filibuster votes, which once occurred perhaps seven or eight times a whole Congressional session, now happen more than 100 times a term. But this routine use of supermajority voting is, at worst, unconstitutional and, at best, at odds with the founders’ intent.

Read Geoghegan’s analysis of Article I and the Federalist Papers. He then continues,

So on the health care bill, as on so many other things, we now have to take what a minority of an inherently unrepresentative body will give us. Forty-one senators from our 21 smallest states — just over 10 percent of our population — can block bills dealing not just with health care but with global warming and hazards that threaten the whole planet. Individual senators now use the filibuster, or the threat of it, as a kind of personal veto, and that power seems to have warped their behavior, encouraging grandstanding and worse.

He suggests several approaches to dispensing with the procedural filibuster.

If the House passed a resolution condemning the use of the procedural filibuster, it might begin to strip the supermajority of its spurious legitimacy. It’s the House that has been the great victim of the filibuster, and at least with such a resolution that chamber could express the grievance of the people as a whole against this usurpation by a minority in the Senate.

The president of the Senate, the vice president himself, could issue an opinion from the chair that the filibuster is unconstitutional. Our first vice presidents, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, felt a serious obligation to resolve the ties and tangles of an evenly divided Senate, and they would not have shrunk from such a challenge.

We citizens could also demand that our parties stop financially supporting senators who are committed to the filibuster, and we ourselves could deprive them of fund-raising dollars.

And we needn’t rule out the possibility of a Supreme Court case. Surely, the court would not allow the Senate to ignore either the obvious intent of the Constitution.

Whether any such approach works, the founders would have expected us to do something about this unconstitutional filibuster. In Federalist No. 75, Hamilton denounced the use of supermajority rule in these prophetic words: “The history of every political establishment in which this principle has prevailed is a history of impotence, perplexity and disorder.” That is a suitable epitaph for what has happened to the Senate.

-RichardH


Volunteer for Martha Coakley

In the video below, President Obama explains why we should volunteer for and support Martha Coakley.

Follow this link to the request from the President for action on our part.

Monday night I made calls from a phone bank in Worcester to urge voters to go to the polls and vote for Martha Coakley. As many of my friends may know, I normally do not really like to use the telephone. I made this exception, because I thought it was that important. These phone banks continue until the election in case you want to give it a try too.


Consider How Well We’ve Done Against Terrorism Since 2001

Follow this link to the commentary by Mark W. Lowenthal posted on the McClatchyDC web site.

Mark M. Lowenthal is the president of the Intelligence & Security Academy. From 2002-2005, he was the Assistant Director of Central Intelligence for Analysis and Production.

He makes the point that I have made several times that fixing the failure to analyze massive amounts of data is not done by increasing the amount of data.

Our efforts to get more data remind me of an old Sesame Street routine.

Customer:  I’ll have bacon and eggs and orange juice for breakfast.

Server: We don’t have orange juice.

Customer: Then I’ll have cereal and orange juice

Server: We don’t have orange juice.

Customer: Then I’ll have pancakes and orange juice

Server: We don’t have orange juice

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