Press Release
Minority Again Uses Filibuster to Hijack Senate Will
Mga Kaugnay na Isyu
Two months after failing to enact meaningful reform to the Senate’s filibuster rules, a minority of the United States Senate is doubling down on its old ways by blocking a final vote on the nomination of Caitlin Halligan, a well-qualified nominee to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. The American Bar Association’s Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary gave the nominee its highest possible rating.
“We saw this morning another glaring example of anti-democratic rule by a minority in the United States Senate,” said Bob Edgar, president of Common Cause. “A bipartisan majority supported this nomination, but a minority barred them from approving her with another filibuster.”
The Constitution requires only a simple majority, 51 votes, for confirmation of judicial nominees; the Senate filibuster rule replaces that with a 60 vote requirement, effectively giving control to the minority.
Ang Common Cause ay nagsampa ng pederal na kaso na naglalayong ideklarang labag sa konstitusyon ang tuntuning filibustero. Ang kaso ay nasa apela sa US Court of Appeals para sa Distrito ng Columbia kasunod ng desisyon ng mababang hukuman noong Disyembre na ang Common Cause at iba pang nagsasakdal, kabilang ang apat na miyembro ng House of Representatives, ay walang legal na katayuan upang ituloy ito.