National Affairs: BATTLE OF THE SENATE
Rule XXII Preserves the Filibuster
As the 86th Congress convenes this week, Senate liberals of both parties see in the 1958 Democratic electoral sweep a mandate for civil rights legislation. But the path to civil rightsand, in fact to any legislation that a minority wants to fight to the deathis blocked by the prospect of filibuster. The liberals' first major effort, therefore, is aimed at changing U.S. Senate Rule XXIIunder which it is virtually impossible to get cloture, i.e., to close off filibusters. What the Rule XXII fight is about:
Background. Until 1917, the Senate had no real cloture rule. In March 1917 a band of eleven Senators led by Progressives Robert La Follette of Wisconsin and George Norris of Nebraska filibustered to death President Wilson's request for permission to arm U.S. merchantmen against German submarines.* When Wilson called the Senate into extraordinary session, an outraged majority, led by Montana's Democratic Senator Thomas J. Walsh, imposed a rule under which debate could be ended by two-thirds of the Senators voting. But the new rule had a fatal flaw: it provided a method for cloture on any Senate measurebut not on a motion to consider the measure. That meant a motion to consider any bill or resolution could be endlessly filibustered. In 1949 Senate liberals put up a hard fight to get a workable cloture rule. The result was today's Rule XXII.
The Hard Way. Rule XXII does apply to motions as well as measuresbut the liberals paid a heavy price for that concession in at least two ways:
1) To cut off debate, Rule XXII now requires the votes of two-thirds of the Senators "duly chosen and sworn"a hard-to-get 66 votes in the 98-member Senate of the 86th Congress.
2) Inserted into Rule XXII almost unnoticed during the 1949 battle was a gimmick written by Georgia's Democratic Senator Richard Russell. It provides that Rule XXII's cloture provisions "shall not apply to any motion to proceed to the consideration of any motion, resolution, or proposal to change any of the Standing Rules of the Senate." Translation: there can be no cloture on any debate about changing Senate rules, including Rule XXII. It is the Russell Amendment that shapes the strategy of the attack against Rule XXII.
The Attack. The strategy of 1959 revolves around the question of whether the Senate, with two-thirds of its membership holding over from election to election, is a "continuing body." If not, then its rules cannot go over from Congress to Congress. Along that line of reasoning, the opponents of Rule XXII worked out the following steps:
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