In
a panel discussion on HBO's Real Time With Bill Maher Friday night, MSNBC host Rachel Maddow
forcefully confronted the GOP's latest Senate leader over his party's
unprecedented use of the filibuster this Congress.
"Republicans
are filibustering everything," Maddow told former Senate Majority Leader
Bill Frist (R-TN), who retired in 2007. "It’s being used more frequently
than it’s ever been used in American history before, and Republicans should
answer for that, because it’s a really stupid way to run the country."
The
audience erupted in applause and cheers.
Frist
responded, "I agree, at times. Its purpose is to empower the minority and
forbid the majority from exploiting them.”
Maddow
wasn’t having any of it. "People just want Republicans to not ... put a
filibuster on every single vote of consequence," she rejoined. "Every
single one."
According
to the Associated Press,
Republicans have used the filibuster "at a record-setting pace" this
Congress, including for uncontroversial legislation that overwhelmingly passes.
In
February, six Senate Republicans who unsuccessfully filibustered the jobs bill
turned around and voted
for it, raising questions about their motives for
using the procedure.
Maher
argued that President Barack Obama’s call for expanding offshore
oil drilling just
weeks before the Gulf spill broke out was a politically-motivated attempt
"to get a couple of Republican votes" on energy legislation and thus
stave off a filibuster.
"The
whole reason Obama was coming out for more drilling was as a sop to the
conservatives," Maher said, "which would not be necessary if we
didn’t have this filibuster nonsense."
When Frist said the
filibuster could be bypassed, citing health care reform, Maddow noted that such
a scenario could only occur when the reforms in question are "directly
related to the budget."
Frist's response
raised the eyebrows of the panelists and drew laughs from the crowd. "In
the Senate, you can do anything, by the way. You can do anything that can’t be
done," he said, sounding almost frivolously.
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