CSPAN CapitalNews description:
As I type, Senator Reid is formalising the 60-vote requirement for amendments for Senator Dodd's and other amendments stripping out retroactive immunity and he's wanting to let the Democrats out of having to vote yes on more cloture votes. (This was all part of the Democratic strategy to close down these investigations into the illegal warrantless wiretapping.) GOP members are also demanding the 60-vote majority... and Senator Reid is giving it to them. Senator Dodd is arguing against, saying that this sets a horrible precedent, because he is not offering anything out of the normal rules of order, but Senator Reid is refusing.
The 60-vote majority is now going to be a requirement. Senator Dood is being limited to an hour of commentary in the remaining 30 hours for amendments as they wish to get this through as quickly as possible.
Let's lay this out:
14 Senators did not bother to vote. Let's say all 49 Republicans voted for cloture and protecting their party retroactively from criminal offenses committed by Mr. Bush, and, separately, the criminal offenses committed by the telecommunications companies involved. This puts the best possible face on this for the Democrats, so don't accuse me of stacking the deck.
That means of the Democrats, 14 didn't bother voting, including all the major Democratic campaigners who are currently Senators. 36 Democrats, not counting Mr. Lieberman, voted. 26 voted for retroactive immunity for warrantless spying on Americans in direction violation of the law. Only 10 did not.
This is 72.2% of Democrats present in the Senate voting for this tragedy. Think about that. If the Democrats controlled every seat in the Senate, cloture passes 72-28. Even under the older rules used to keep civil rights law stalled in the 1950s and early 1960s - when getting cloture was more difficult - cloture would have passed.
Where are these supposed "Good Democrats?"
I don't see 'em. I see a fringe of people working against this who just got a bipartisan smackdown of the first order:
Here's another headline from yesterday, the kind of discovery the Democrats just voted overwhelmingly to end:
ETA: There are, reportedly, more rounds of cloture votes ahead, despite Senator Reid's move avoiding cloture votes on amendments. It is, I suppose, possible that 17 votes could be changed - that's the number necessary to support the filibuster. Cloture requires 60 votes outright, not 60%, so that means the coward no-shows can continue to be cowardly no-shows. See
llachglin's flowchart comment below.
Senate votes 76-10 to advance warrantless wiretapping bill that gives phone companies retroactive immunity.Damn, what a headline.
As I type, Senator Reid is formalising the 60-vote requirement for amendments for Senator Dodd's and other amendments stripping out retroactive immunity and he's wanting to let the Democrats out of having to vote yes on more cloture votes. (This was all part of the Democratic strategy to close down these investigations into the illegal warrantless wiretapping.) GOP members are also demanding the 60-vote majority... and Senator Reid is giving it to them. Senator Dodd is arguing against, saying that this sets a horrible precedent, because he is not offering anything out of the normal rules of order, but Senator Reid is refusing.
The 60-vote majority is now going to be a requirement. Senator Dood is being limited to an hour of commentary in the remaining 30 hours for amendments as they wish to get this through as quickly as possible.
Let's lay this out:
14 Senators did not bother to vote. Let's say all 49 Republicans voted for cloture and protecting their party retroactively from criminal offenses committed by Mr. Bush, and, separately, the criminal offenses committed by the telecommunications companies involved. This puts the best possible face on this for the Democrats, so don't accuse me of stacking the deck.
That means of the Democrats, 14 didn't bother voting, including all the major Democratic campaigners who are currently Senators. 36 Democrats, not counting Mr. Lieberman, voted. 26 voted for retroactive immunity for warrantless spying on Americans in direction violation of the law. Only 10 did not.
This is 72.2% of Democrats present in the Senate voting for this tragedy. Think about that. If the Democrats controlled every seat in the Senate, cloture passes 72-28. Even under the older rules used to keep civil rights law stalled in the 1950s and early 1960s - when getting cloture was more difficult - cloture would have passed.
Where are these supposed "Good Democrats?"
I don't see 'em. I see a fringe of people working against this who just got a bipartisan smackdown of the first order:
Senate votes 76-10 to advance warrantless wiretapping bill that gives phone companies retroactive immunity.And people who didn't show up don't fucking count.
Here's another headline from yesterday, the kind of discovery the Democrats just voted overwhelmingly to end:
AT&T engineer says Bush Administration sought to implement domestic spying within two weeks of taking officeWhat we can hope is that this individual lawsuit may get to continue moving forward on the basis that two weeks after inauguration is before the immunity start time in the bill. Assuming that doesn't get amended back to cover this, too. Hopefully they don't know about it yet, because if they do, and they think it's real, they will.
Raw Story
[...]
“What he saw,” Bruce Afran, a New Jersey lawyer representing the plaintiffs, told the Times, “was decisive evidence that within two weeks of taking office, the Bush administration was planning a comprehensive effort of spying on Americans’ phone usage.”
ETA: There are, reportedly, more rounds of cloture votes ahead, despite Senator Reid's move avoiding cloture votes on amendments. It is, I suppose, possible that 17 votes could be changed - that's the number necessary to support the filibuster. Cloture requires 60 votes outright, not 60%, so that means the coward no-shows can continue to be cowardly no-shows. See
no subject
Date: 2007-12-17 07:48 pm (UTC)Don't you just love arcane Senate procedure?
no subject
Date: 2007-12-17 08:07 pm (UTC)Mind you, I support Senator Dodd's insistence upon continuing. One fights all the way down. But I do not see anything to grab ahold of here. There is a substantial majority which will vote against any amendment or substitution - Mr. Reid knows this, which is why he introduced the version of the bill he did - leaving only the possibility of votes against cloture. Is there actually any possibility of changing 17 votes on this matter at this point? Because that's what's needed. How does that work?
no subject
Date: 2007-12-17 08:20 pm (UTC)For all of those who believe in the power of the Solstice to bring light after the time of greatest darkness, the time to start making sacrifices is now.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-17 08:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-17 08:40 pm (UTC)Clinton (though I wouldn't count on her)
Obama
Biden
Byrd
Durbin
Kennedy
Kohl
Leahy
Murray
Tester
Webb
That leaves us substantially short, unfortunately. I count 23 other Democrats not in this list of likelies, and maybe one or two possible Republicans, with 20 more needed to stop cloture, so a good outcome is not impossible at this point. It is unlikely. But there's no way to predict what amendments will be passed after the bill is submitted, some of which could be poison pills that keep the bill from moving forward with immunity intact, because of the defection of current bill supporters.
Dodd's current list is 3 who will support a filibuster on the final cloture vote, and no clear answer from the other 97. This is not over yet.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-17 08:52 pm (UTC)Real leadership from the Senate/Presidential trio would mean that they collectively use their clout as the potential next president to promise preferential treatment of legislation from Senators who do the right thing. Say, pork for the states of Senators who vote the right way. That's ugly, and it can happen with no quid pro quo ever being made clear to the public, but that's how hard-knuckle legislation happens. It's compared to sausage-making for a reason. I'm not saying that will happen, but it could. It's worth some legislative compromise down the road to get the right outcome on this.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-17 09:53 pm (UTC)Sure there is. Senator Reid has ruled supermajority requirement on all amendments, at 60 votes yes. The bill gives Mr. Bush everything he wants right now; they will not allow amendments, and can stop them 100% of the time.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-17 08:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-17 11:44 pm (UTC)