I was excited when I found out that Republicans won a majority in all 3 branches of the federal governemnt. And I thought we'd get a lot of
egislatio
passed as a result.
But now reality is sinking in: the filibuster rule dictates that a majority isn't a majority unless it's a bigger majority than what we've got.
Example: the senate took a vote on banning transgendered people in women's sports, and the majority voted in favor of the ban. But despite the majority, they were 9 votes short of passing the bill.
IIRC, Filibustering is when a member of congress takes up a large amount of
the discussion time to try to derail a vote.
This sounds like the 2/3rds majority rule. That is the way it has always
been for many votes and is nothing new.
So we're paying 535 members of congress $250k per year each and they (with
00
certainty) can't pass any legislation. Great!
If they were busy doing their real jobs and trying to find ways to
compromise that serve the country as a whole vs. trying to find things
that they know only their party will vote for, this wouldn't be an issue.
It has been too long since they have done so.
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