"There is nothing wrong with a frank and honest debate between two visions of our country’s future. But for the foreseeable future, neither party can definitively defeat the other."
"There is nothing wrong with a frank and honest debate between two visions of our country’s future. But for the foreseeable future, neither party can definitively defeat the other."
Grover Norquist, the president of Americans for Tax Reform, has long held sway over members of Congress by holding them to a pledge against tax increases. But a small and increasingly vocal group of freshman lawmakers are pushing back.
Yesterday the Senate held five absolutely meaningless, pointless and time-wasting budget votes that never had a chance of passing. Then, senators took to the spin zone to start casting blame. It’s like a golfer whiffing on his first tee shot five times, walking off the course and claiming he just played a great round. Saying the budget process is broken doesn't even get at how bad it has become in Washington. Now senators are stomping on the budget process's tattered remains.
Yesterday the Senate passed bipartisan legislation by a 78-20 vote -- and it didn't just name a post office. The legislation reauthorized the 80-year-old Export-Import Bank, which makes loan guarantees to foreign buyers who seek to do business with U.S. exporters.
This November, let us remember that compromise is not synonymous with betrayal or independence a weakness. Let us reward candidates who put country ahead of party and progress before ideological orthodoxy. Above all, let us look for candidates with the character to write new profiles in courage.
House Majority Leader Eric Cantor is taking fire from the right for working across the aisle too often.
Which one of the following filibusters involved poison? 1) An early 1900s filibuster in the Rhode Island Senate 2) Strom Thurmond's 24-hour 18-minute filibuster during debate over the Civil Rights Act of 1957 3) Huey Long's 1935 filibuster when he asked the press what he should talk about (eventually he decided recipes) 4) Robert LaFollette's 1908 filibuster to protest a banking bill 5) Bernie Sanders' filibuster in 2010 over the extension of the Bush tax cuts.
Earlier this week, Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) expressed his support for filibuster reform. But where did the filibuster come from? Here's a quick timeline:
Yesterday, Sen. Harry Reid announced his support for filibuster reform, the third point in our Make Congress Work! action plan. “If there were anything that ever needed changing in this body, it’s the filibuster rules, because it’s been abused, abused, abused,” Reid says.
While the federal government struggles to agree on anything, there are signs of cooperation at the local level. Over the past six months, citizen leader Blair Forlaw has profiled instances of bipartisan cooperation in all 50 states.