Now that the Covid-19 stimulus bill is heading to President Joe Biden’s desk, the Democrats have a number of options for their next act. Most pressing is the For the People Act, also known as H.R. 1, a series of election reforms the House passed March 3.
Manchin believes that the filibuster — which requires 60 votes to override it to allow a bill to pass in a final majority vote — helps make compromises possible.
The bill, if it becomes law, would rewrite how federal elections are held in the United States, banning congressional gerrymandering, requiring states to implement automatic voter registration and same-day registration and restoring voting rights to disenfranchised former felons. It’s basically the antithesis of the deluge of GOP-sponsored bills in the states that would restrict access to the polls, most of which target minority voters.
But it, like almost everything left on the Biden agenda that isn’t infrastructure, is plagued by a single question: “How do you get past a Republican filibuster?” And, friends, I think it’s about time that we embraced a little something I would like to call “the Manchin rule.”
“The Manchin rule” is a hypothetical, not a thing that actually exists right now. It’s not even something that has been directly endorsed by Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., whose vote is needed for any change in how the Senate functions. But, as I’ll explain in a second, it may be what saves our country.
As things stand, Manchin believes that the filibuster — which requires 60 votes to override it to allow a bill to pass in a final majority vote — helps make compromises possible. That belief has a few problems, not least of which is what will happen when the minority party has no interest in budging from its obstructionist position.
Sometimes you need to make compromises to get things done.
And how does the Senate GOP feel about the For the People Act? “Everything about this bill is rotten to the core. This is a bill as if written in hell by the devil himself,” Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, said Wednesday on Fox News, rather succinctly setting the tone for the coming debate.
Yes, Lee is pretty far to the right of center, but I’ve yet to see any indications from more moderate Republicans that they support the bill as it stands or are even willing to offer up changes that would gain their votes. Nor have I heard much from any of them about the anti-voting rights bills in the states. So finding 10 Republicans willing to invoke cloture and have a vote on the bill’s merits seems unlikely.
Now, Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., have both said they firmly oppose ditching the filibuster. For the moment, then, let’s set aside my many previous arguments for getting rid of the filibuster. I still stand by that position, but as Manchin himself would agree, sometimes you need to make compromises to get things done. In this case, it may mean that the filibuster gets to live — but with major reforms.








