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Racist past of filibuster and why it should end

By Stacy M. Brown
NNPA Newswire

The first filibuster occurred in 1837 and was used infrequently until after the Civil War when minority parties employed the measure to stop civil rights efforts.
Credit: Stock/NNPA

The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act and a voting and ethics bill passed the Democratic controlled U.S. House of Representatives, but neither stands a chance in the evenly divided Senate.

President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan faced fierce opposition in the Senate, but ultimately a slimmed-down version passed using the reconciliation procedure.

Reconciliation is used only in rare cases.

Lawmakers cannot use it for the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, the voting rights and ethics measure, D.C. Statehood, and other causes near and dear to some Democrats and most African Americans.

But Democrats do have a rare opportunity to get rid of the filibuster, a Senate cloture rule requiring 60 members to end debate on a topic and move to a vote.

NNPA Newswire has reached out to all 50 Senate Democrats and Independents seeking their position on the filibuster.

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While some responded, others have held their positions close to the vest.

“If we want to get things done in the Senate, then we must abolish the filibuster,” declared Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.).

“It is an antiquated, Jim Crow rule that overrides the majority and halts progress. It’s got to go.”

Nora Keefe, a spokesperson for Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), told NNPA Newswire in an email that Warren “is a long supporter of getting rid of the filibuster.”

Sen. Warren tweeted that the ‘For The People Act’ includes critical parts of her bill to end corruption. “It’s a good first step for protecting voting rights and restoring trust in our government,” Sen. Warren noted.

“We can’t let [Sen. Minority Leader] Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) veto this critical bill for our democracy with the filibuster. If the Senate is going to do the things the American people expect us to do, we must abolish the filibuster.”

Sen. Tina Smith (D-Minn.) voiced support for ending the filibuster.

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“The Senate needs to abolish the filibuster,” Sen. Smith tweeted over the weekend.

“It’s undemocratic, and we need to move this country forward.”

Noting that any significant voting rights legislation would need unlikely Republican support, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) admitted she had changed course on the filibuster.

“I’ve gone from a ‘maybe’ to a ‘yes,’” Klobuchar said.

Sen. John Tester (D-Montana) also is reportedly leaning toward approving any attempts to end the filibuster while Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Oregon) remains a “yes.”

Democrats Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona both have opposed efforts to eliminate the filibuster.

However, after the marathon session to pass President Biden’s American Rescue Plan, Sen. Machin hedged slightly in a nationally televised interview with NBC News.

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“I’m not going to change my mind,” he insisted.

Sen. Manchin noted he would support establishing a “talking filibuster” that might require any senator objecting to ending debate to remain on the floor and speak for the entire time.

“If you want to make it a little bit more painful, make him stand there and talk, I’m willing to look at any way we can,” Sen. Manchin remarked. “But I’m not willing to take away the involvement of the minority.”

President Joe Biden has refused to publicly discuss whether he would seek an end to the filibuster.

Professor Jared Carter, a Constitutional Law Expert at Vermont Law School, said it’s time to end the filibuster.

He noted that the first filibuster occurred in 1837 and was used infrequently until after the Civil War when minority parties employed the measure to stop civil rights efforts.

“It is a relic of reconstruction and Jim Crow South. It was regularly used to oppress racial minorities and oppose civil rights laws,” Professor Carter wrote in an email to NNPA Newswire.

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“Last year, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Kentucky) threatened a filibuster over an anti-lynching law,” Professor Carter noted. “It’s anti-democratic in that it gives the minority party veto power over popular legislation.”

Rashad Robinson, the president of Color of Change, noted the filibuster has always stood in the way of racial progress.

“Whether employed by Southern Democrats of the Jim Crow era or the Republican Party today after a major shift in the party’s stance on racial equality,” Robinson wrote in an op-ed for USA Today.

“When you understand the filibuster’s racist past, it becomes clear that it has a racist present as well — and that we need to get rid of it.”

His argument is as sound as any and dates well beyond Jim Crow.

In 1922 the House passed a vital anti-lynching bill to combat the Ku Klux Klan’s worst violence, but it was filibustered in the Senate by southern Senate Democrats, Robinson noted.

Congress tried again in 1935, but Georgia Democrat Richard Russell organized a six-day filibuster to oppose it.

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Russell once said he was “willing to go as far and make as great a sacrifice to preserve and ensure white supremacy in the social, economic, and political life of our state as any man who lives within her borders.”

As Robinson wrote, the Senate’s grandest office building is now named in Russell’s honor, and Congress has never – to this day – passed an anti-lynching bill.

Lawmakers used the filibuster attempting to stop the 1957 Civil Rights Act, and, most recently, Republicans have asserted it in attempts to thwart the DREAM Act, the Affordable Care Act, and other bills that benefit communities of color.

Many have posed the question similar to David Leonhardt of the New York Times, who asked, “if forced to choose between the protection of voting rights and the protection of the filibuster, what will Democrats do?”

Leonhardt characterized his position by declaring that “it’s shaping up to be the most significant question about the new Democratic Senate.”

He noted that Republican legislators in states throughout the nation are on a mission to make voting more difficult because they believe that lower turnout helps the party win elections.

The Supreme Court – with six Republican appointees among the nine justices – has generally allowed voter restriction laws to stand.

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“The filibuster hurts all of us, not just the Black community,” Robinson, of Color of Change, noted. “Anyone who needs real change or help loses out to the Republican obsession with power.”

Leonhardt concluded that “there does not appear to be a compromise path on this issue. Democrats can overhaul the filibuster — and, by extension, transform the Senate, ushering in an uncertain era in which both parties would be able to pass more of the legislation they favor. Or Democrats can effectively surrender on voting rights. It’s one or the other.”

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