Every once a year or so, there’s a monumental vote in the Senate on which some crucial aspect of democracy or human rights dangles. Because the Senate is a deeply broken institution that over-represents rural, white Republicans and requires a 60-vote threshold to do almost anything, votes that should be easy end up coming down to one or two “moderate” or “maverick” senators in either party who the nation desperately hopes will wake up one morning and decide to do the right thing.
That’s the thing about the Senate “moderates” — they are not driven by a passion for policy or for change.
Sometimes these senators pretend to be undecided. It’s a favorite move of Maine’s Republican senator, Susan Collins, to feign some deep “concern” for whatever is happening, claim up until the moment of her vote that she is still genuinely considering both sides, release nothing-burger statements that keep the public hanging on her every word — and then vote the wrong way.
Democrats thought she might block Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation to the Supreme Court, for instance, not only because of the credible sexual assault claim against him and his disturbing outburst during the Senate hearing but also because she claims to support abortion rights, and his confirmation is a dire threat to them. Of course, she let him sail right through.
In the case of Sens. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., and the massive threat to American voting rights playing out now, the so-called moderates have made their intentions clear from the start — and liberals are still naively pinning their hopes on the two.
As more than a dozen states pass flagrant voter suppression laws that by design largely exclude Black people from voting and help Republicans win elections, Senate Democrats have a chance to pass federal voting rights legislation that will stop these efforts. But to pass that legislation and other progressive priorities, Democrats have to eliminate the filibuster.
Both Sinema and Manchin have said since the moment President Joe Biden was elected that they will not budge on the filibuster. Yet people were still shocked and angry Sunday when Manchin made it clear, yet again, that he is not interested in allowing his own party to legislate without “bipartisan” support. It’s almost like if someone threatened to punch him in the face, and he didn’t want to be punched in the face, but because the two couldn’t come to a verbal compromise on the issue, he just stood there and allowed himself to be punched in the face.
This idea of the Senate “maverick” swooping in to save democracy has a lot to do with the late Arizona Republican John McCain.
This idea of the Senate “maverick” swooping in to save democracy has a lot to do with the late Arizona Republican John McCain, whose shocking thumbs-down vote on repealing the Affordable Care Act in 2017 thwarted his own party’s best effort to do that. McCain had previously expressed disdain for Obamacare, and people assumed he had some change of heart on the matter because of his brain cancer.
He and his aides later clarified that he didn’t actually want to save people’s health coverage; he was just angry that Republicans had tried to push the bill through without a hearing or any bipartisan input. “I was thanked for my vote by Democratic friends more profusely than I should have been for helping save Obamacare,” McCain wrote in his 2018 memoir. “That had not been my goal.”








