Then Sen Obama against Nuclear Option 'Fighting, Bitterness, gridlock will only increase'
Senate Passes āNuclear Optionā Fundamentally Changing Filibuster Power
The Democrat-controlled Senate voted Thursday to invoke the so-called ānuclear option,ā making it possible to confirm most presidential nominees by a simple majority vote.
Confirmed: U.S. Senate Passes Nuclear Option Fundamentally Changing Filibuster Power
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) led Democrats in approving a substantial change to Senate filibuster rules.
Thursdayās vote marked a major shift in more than 200 years of Senate precedent that required a 60-vote majority to assure a final vote on most presidential nominees. The ānuclear option,ā however, means only 51 votes are required to confirm most judicial and executive nominees.
Supreme Court appointees are still exempt form the rule change. Also, itās important to note that this vote doesnāt block other filibusters like Kentucky Senator Rand Paulās nearly 13-hour marathon speech against President Barack Obamaās drone program.
Thursdayās ānuclear optionā vote only applies to most judicial and executive nominees.
āIt shows you just how desperate and cynical Democrats have become,ā one Senate Republican aide told TheBlaze. āThey have proven willing to destroy a defining and historic aspect of the Senate in order to distract from their disastrous health care law and the harm itās inflicting on the American people right now.ā
āUnfortunately, while their ploy may help them in the news cycle for a few days, Americans will still be suffering all the while,ā the aide added.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) accused Republicans Thursday of āunbelievable, unprecedented obstructionā of the presidentās selections for court vacancies and other offices.
āItās time to change the Senate, before this institution becomes obsolete,ā Reid said.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), for his part, accused Democrats of trying to distract from the ongoing disaster that has been the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, adding that Democrats would later come to regret the rule change.
āWhen Democrats were in the minority they argued strenuously for the very thing they now say we will have to do without, namely the right to extend a debate on lifetime appointments. In other words, they believe that one set of rules should apply to them and another set to everybody else,ā he said.
McConnell reminded his colleagues Reid said in 2012 he wouldnāt try to change the process of approving appointees.
āHe may as well just have said, āIf you like the rules of the Senate, you can keep them,āā McConnell said, referring to the presidentās oft-repeated promise that Americans could keep their insurance under Obamacare.
āSenator Reid is breaking over 100 years of years of precedence in order to get his way,ā Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said in a statement. āReid is a bully, dictating to the Senate.ā
Democratic Sens. Mark Pryor (Ark.), Joe Manchin (W.V.) and Carl Levin (Mich.) voted with Republicans against the rule change.
āMy judicial nominees have waited nearly two-and-a-half times longer to receive yes or no votes on the Senate floor than those of President Bush. The ones who do get a vote are generally confirmed with little or any dissent. This isnāt obstruction on substance on qualifications. Itās just to gum up the works,ā President Obama said after the vote. āThe vote today I think is an indication that a majority of senators believe as I believe that enough is enough. The Americanās peopleās business is far too important to keep falling prey day after day to partisan politics.ā
āIām a former senator. So is my vice president. We both value any Senateās duty to advise and consent. Itās important and we take that very seriously. But a few now refuse to treat that duty of advise and consent with the respect that it deserves. It is no longer used in a responsible way to govern. Itās rather used as a reckless and relentless tool to grind all business to a halt. Thatās not what our founders intended,ā he added.