On the surface, a filibuster seems like heavy-handed obstructionism. On the other, we just saw it used to excellent effect last night to block an anti-abortion bill in Texas, despite numerous and repeated shenanigans. Many of my dear friends see this as an exception to an otherwise cumbersome and deplorable tactic
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In principle, I like the filibuster, though the current situation in in Washington leaves something to be desired. ATM, a bill has to have 60 votes Aye in order to even be voted on.
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Yeah, but in the US Senate/Congress a filibuster means you need to be up there talking. If you stand athwart the path of the legislation, you have to stand up there and do it. Most filibusters in the Senate are simple motions -- no one has to stand up and ramble on, they just hand in an IOU and that's pretty much forced a 2/3rds majority requirement on every issue and it's preventing all sorts of work (good and bad) from taking place.
So. There should be a filibuster, but you have to actually do the filibustering.
later
Tom
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Making it a voting rule will also mean a good saving on time, too - I'm not too well acquainted with US procedures on how time is set aside for the session and whether or not a debate can overrun into the next bill's allotted time, but one way or another spending extra time on a filibuster is going to end up with less time overall for actually debating and voting on legislation.
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Filibustering doesn't happen in the US House. In the House, it's pretty much as the Speaker of the House calls it, all the time.
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