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Tag Archives: Secret holds

McCaskill takes on secret holds – what about the filibuster?

02 Monday Aug 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Claire McCaskill, filibuster, GOP obstructionism, missouri, Secret holds, Senat rules

Last Wednesday, Harry Reid added to the Senate calendar Claire McCaskill’s legislative baby, the McCaskill-Wyden-Grassley bill that would put an end to secret holds, which allow a senator to unilaterally stop legislation without identifying him or herself. Claire McCaskill claims she has rounded up 68 votes for the bill which seems to guarantee that it will pass.

While this will be a real feather in McCaskill’s cap if it comes to pass and is certainly worthy legislation, since nobody – or at least nobody who is serious – can deny that the more we know, the better off we are, it is, in terms of the Senate’s procedural malfunctions, pretty small potatoes. Numerous commentators (see here, here and here) have noted that the problem is not secret holds, but too many holds used as a tool for partisan obstruction, which, as Jonathan Bernstein notes, constitues an actual abuse of Senate rules.

There is little evidence that making holds public will do much to fix that problem. If you really  think that forcing these arrogant obstructionists to put their name to a hold will shame them, then you haven’t been paying attention to their outrageous behavior for the last two years. When it comes time to stand up for the de facto GOP negative hegemony, you can bet they’ll be right where they’re needed. There’s lots to be said for Bernstein’s preferred remedy:

Rather than make Senators explain themselves and have the Majority Leader judge which holds are legitimate and which are not, the Democrats should play hardball: they should let the Republicans know that unless the total number of holds on nominations shrinks dramatically, the Dems will start calling nominations up anyway, hold or not, and force the GOP to find 41 votes against considering them.

And if the Republicans can muster 41 votes, then we come to the issue of reforming the filibuster, which would fix this and lots of other problems. The Senate could change the filibuster rules on the first day of the new session, January 2011, right after the midterms. Of course, McCaskill has lately been been one of the Democrats voting with Republicans to uphold their filibusters – so do you think her concern about making things work might extend to doing something that would really help fix the broken Senate – where, as the new saying goes, legislation comes to die and the will of the majority is routinely flouted?

 

A simple question: Why did it take him so long?

25 Friday Jun 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Claire McCaskill, Mike Johanns, missouri, Secret holds, Senate

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) today on secret holds in the Senate via Twitter:

Another Senator supports ending secret holds. Thank you Sen Johanns. Now we have 69.     about 2 hours ago  via UberTwitter  

So, what took Senator Mike Johanns (r) so long? It’s not like he wasn’t aware this has been an issue over the last few months. And he’s only now getting on the bandwagon? Just asking.

Previously:

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D): Is that 68 votes to end secret holds like a filibuster proof majority? (June 22, 2010)

Claire’s Progress (May 6, 2010)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): on secret holds via Twitter (May 4, 2010)

Speaking of Harry Truman, it’s Senator Claire McCaskill (D)… (May 1, 2010)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): even more on secret holds (April 22, 2010)

Secret holds redux (April 21, 2010)

Round one: McCaskill vs. secret holds (April 20, 2010)

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D): Is that 68 votes to end secret holds like a filibuster proof majority?

22 Tuesday Jun 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Claire McCaskill, missouri, Secret holds, Senate

Just asking.

‘Cause if it’s as effective as that sixty vote super majority that Democrats held in the Senate before Martha Coakley‘s campaign killed it, I ain’t holdin’ out any hope.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) via Twitter today:

We’re on a roll! Now have 68 Senators supporting the end of secret holds. Thanks Sen Crapo, who signed on today.That’s 56 Ds,10 Rs, & 2 Is.     about 3 hours ago  via UberTwitter  

It would be great if we could at least get one member of Republican leadership to sign on to effort to end secret holds. So far no luck.     about 3 hours ago  via UberTwitter  

Mitch McConnell? I don’t think anyone is holding their breath there, either.

Claire's Progress

07 Friday May 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Claire McCaskill, missouri, nominations, Secret holds, Senate

Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of obstruction, I will fear no republican…

And maybe add one or two.

Senator Claire McCaskill via Twitter on her progress to abolish secret holds on nominations before the Senate:

More progress.We have every D Senator except Sen Byrd on the letter to end secret holds. 58 strong. Now we need to work on Rs. None so far.     about 1 hour ago  via UberTwitter  

Can it be? A crack in the obstruction?

Woohooo!!! First Republican signed the letter to never use a secret hold and abolish them. Big props to Sen Collins.     10 minutes ago  via UberTwitter  

But wait, where’s President Snowe?

Previously:

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): on secret holds via Twitter (May 4, 2010)

Speaking of Harry Truman, it’s Senator Claire McCaskill (D)… (May 1, 2010)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): even more on secret holds (April 22, 2010)

Round one: McCaskill vs. secret holds (April 20, 2010)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): on secret holds via Twitter

04 Tuesday May 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Claire McCaskill, missouri, nominations, Secret holds, Senate, Twitter

Senator Claire McCaskill via Twitter on her progress to date in getting her Senate colleagues to address secret holds on nominations:

Now have 43 Senators on the letter pledging to never secretly hold a nomination and calling for the end of this very bad habit.     about 2 hours ago  via UberTwitter  

….This is a permanent pledge. No secret holds now or ever. Working to abolish forever.     about 1 hour ago  via UberTwitter  in reply to ….

It’d certainly be ironic if any of those 43 who signed the letter was responsible for any of the current secret holds.

Previously:

Speaking of Harry Truman, it’s Senator Claire McCaskill (D)… (May 1, 2010)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): even more on secret holds (April 22, 2010)

Round one: McCaskill vs. secret holds (April 20, 2010)

Update:

From Senator Claire McCaskill via Twitter (May 5th):

Now have 50 signatures on End the Secret Hold letter.More work on it today.Rules being broken by failure of Rs to reveal who’s holding noms. 15 minutes ago via web

Speaking of Harry Truman, it's Senator Claire McCaskill (D)…

01 Saturday May 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Claire McCaskill, meta, missouri, republican obstructionism, Rhode Island, Secret holds, Senate, Sheldon Whitehouse

Previously:

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): even more on secret holds (April 22, 2010)

Round one: McCaskill vs. secret holds (April 20, 2010)

Yesterday, speaking on the floor of the Senate about republican obstructionism via secret holds on nominees with Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D):

The transcript:

…Senator Claire McCaskill (D): I came to the floor of the Senate last Tuesday to make seventy-four unanimous consent motions to trigger a law that this body voted for by a vote of ninety-six to two back in January of two thousand seven. And this law says that once a unanimous consent motion is made for a nomination that people who are secretly holding the nomination must come out into the sunlight. The law requires that six days after that motion is made that whoever is holding the nominee must identify themselves, and in fact, that must be published in the Congressional Record…

 

…Tomorrow would be the day for publication for all of the dozens of different nominees that are being held by who knows who for what, who knows what reason. I wanted to make sure that, uh, the leaders of both parties were aware that this time had run and today, uh, I would ask that by unanimous consent a letter that I have sent to the minority leader and to the majority leader, acknowledging that the rule has been triggered and with the list of the various nominees, asking that they make sure that the members of their party have in fact come forward and identified themselves for the record tomorrow.

[….]

As I said last week, it’s your prerogative as a senator to hold a nominee. Work against that nomination. Try to defeat ’em in committee. Keep in mind that all these nominees I’m talkin’ about came out of committee without an objection. No objection in committee. But if you want to object that’s your prerogative as a senator. Come out here on this floor and tell the world why this is the wrong person for the job, but don’t hide, don’t hide.

So, uh, I, I want to make sure, I will be watching with interest tomorrow the Congressional Record. I’m very worried that we’re gonna have what’s called the old switcheroo. Which means that if you withdraw your hold in six days then you, you can just hand it off to somebody else. So you say, well I no longer have a secret hold, and you say, whisper to your buddy, hey, why don’t you do the secret hold now. And then have six, and more six days. And then another six days. And I just want to serve notice that I will be out here making these unanimous consent motions every time there’s a secret hold. So that anybody who does it is only gonna have six days. And really, seriously, if we start this switcheroo and continue to go week after week after week without knowing who’s holding these people or why, that’s when people should really get angry. ‘Cause that means that folks voted for a law that they had every intention of evading.

[….]

To be fair, um, it, I know we had eighty-four pending at the first of the week. Uh, I think us raising a ruckus is beginning to have little bit of an impact because the iceberg moved slightly this week, I think we may have confirmed fourteen this week of the, uh, seventy-four, I believe, that I moved by unanimous consent last week. Keep in mind that all seventy-four that I moved last week had been unanimously reported out of committee. No opposition from the Republican Party in committee. None. So.

Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D): Votes in favor by the Republicans on the committee [crosstalk] in many cases.

Senator McCaskill: Exactly, exactly. And, in fact, many of them voice voted without any, we even checked to make sure no one said nay at the committee level. So, these were unanimously agreed to out of committee and there were seventy-four last week. I made the motions, um, last Tuesday on the seventy-four. You made a few motions on some that were not in that group that had been unanimously agreed to. And, uh, I believe this week some of the group, maybe some of yours, maybe some of the ones that I made unanimous consent motions on, I know that we had fourteen that su, that moved, so I think we’re around seventy total right now. But of those, sixty of them are this unanimous ca, category, and ones that we have no idea who’s holding them.

Senator Whitehouse: And of those, uh, if I could ask another question, of those who, uh, have been cleared, some have been allowed to come forward for votes on the Senate floor. I think the last was Judge Chen Chin who had been held for a considerable period of time and, we actually, if I recall correctly, had to file cloture and take more time. There’s a process built around cloture, so it burns up senate floor time when we’re forced to do that. And when the nomination was finally voted on in the Senate, is my recollection correct, that he cleared the Senate ninety-eight to zero?

Senator McCaskill: He was held for a long time. And yes, you’re correct, we had to go through all the procedural hoops, uh, that take time, and time is money when you’re workin’ for the taxpayers. Every hour that we spend on something that’s an hour we can’t spend on something else. And everyone, all the good people that are here working in this room and in the cloakrooms and in all the offices are paid with taxpayers. We took time to go through cloture and then there wasn’t one no vote. Now if that’s not a great example of obstructionism for the sake of obstructing, I can’t think of a better one. Forcing the United States Senate to take days to confirm unanimously a nominee after they’ve been held for a long period of time.          

Senator Whitehouse: And just by a process of elimination, unless one of the two absent senators was the one that had the hold, whoever was holding Judge Chen Chin actually ended up voting for him after months and months of having delayed the nomination.

Senator McCaskill: I don’t know about you, I’d love to know how many people secretly hold a nominee and end up voting yes. Because nine times out of ten, I shouldn’t say that, I don’t know, it’s a secret, I, I, I have to believe that many times people are holding a nominee secretly ’cause they want something else from the agency. You know, in fact I had a member actually acknowledge to me that, well, you know, uh, I don’t care about what happens to that nominee, but I need something from this agency. And so it’s, it’s like a leverage thing. Like I’m gonna hold your nominee hostage until this agency gives me what I want. I think we remember, there was an instance that came out in public that some people were being held for, you know, projects in their state.

Senator Whitehouse: And that is the right of a senator to do, so long as they do it publicly.

Senator McCaskill: Right.

Senator Whitehouse: They can still do that even after the secret holds are [crosstalk][inaudible]

Senator McCaskill: Absolutely. If you were actually trying to leverage, I don’t agree with this, but it’s your right as a senator if you want to leverage a project in your state by saying to the administration, I won’t let you have any nominees to go to work in that agency until that agency gives me what I want, that’s your right. But, people ought to know about it. But see, I don’t think that’d be really popular. I think that
people might have a problem with that. That’s the beauty of the secret hold. You never have to tell that you’re leveraging a nominee to get something you want out of an agency. That’s why we need to end the secret hold. Simple….

“…And I just want to serve notice that I will be out here making these unanimous consent motions every time there’s a secret hold…”

“…We took time to go through cloture and then there wasn’t one no vote. Now if that’s not a great example of obstructionism for the sake of obstructing, I can’t think of a better one…”

Give ’em hell, Claire.

That’s the Claire McCaskill we all worked so hard to elect.

Like Senator McCaskill, we’ll be watching for what transpires in the Congressional Record today.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): even more on secret holds

23 Friday Apr 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Claire McCaskill, missouri, nominations, Secret holds, U.S. Senate

Round one: McCaskill vs. secret holds (April 20, 2010)

Secret holds redux (April 21, 2010)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) speaking today in the Senate on secret holds:

The transcript:

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): Mr. President, I came to the floor on Tuesday of this week to, um, do something that I don’t think had been done before under the rules. We had a new law that went into effect, uh, in the early part of two thousand and seven that gave us a mechanism that was supposed to stop secret holds. Uh, and we are all waiting to see if, if by moving all of the nominations by unanimous consent if in fact the owners of the secret holds step forward. While we wait to see if the rule that was designed and passed into law works a bunch of us have been talking. And the, the folks that have been talking about this are the newest members of the Senate in the Democratic Party. There are twenty-one of us that arrived in the United States Senate sometime between now and January of two thousand and seven. It’s a pity, pretty big group of senators. And in discussing the secret holds with my colleagues that have been here for a fairly short period of time we decided well why don’t we just quit doing ’em. Let’s quit worrying about whether you’re identifying yourself in six days or whether you’re gonna play the switcheroo and pull your secret hold and put another secret hold in. Let’s just stop it. No more secret holds.

So, we know have drafted a letter to Senator Reid and Leader McConnell, Leader Reid and lead, Leader McConnell. And we have said, first, we will not do secret holds. We’re out of the business of secret holds. We’re not gonna do ’em. And secondly, we want the Senate to pass a rule that prohibits them entirely. If you want to hold somebody, fine. But say who you are and why you’re doing it. Want to vote against somebody, that’s your right. But this notion that you can, behind closed doors, do some kind of secret negotiation to get something you want from the agency, and let’s be honest about it, that’s what a lot of this is. It’s getting leverage, secretly getting leverage for something you want. Well, those aren’t appropriate secrets for the public business. Uh, we have eighty secret holds right now. About seventy-six of those are Republican secret holds. Four are Democratic secret holds. And by the way, all eighty of the ones I made the motion on, all came out of committee unanimously. We even checked on the voice votes to make sure that no one said no in committee. There were no no votes. Completely unopposed out of committee these eighty nominees. For everything from the Ambassador to Syria to U.S. Marshalls to U.S. Attorneys, these are people that need to get to work. And they’re going to pass here. They’re all gonna pass. So we need to get this done, we need to stop secret holds, we need to get these people confirmed, and we need to change the way we do business around here.

So I am, and I want to once again give a shout out to Senator Wyden and Grassley who worked on this issue for a number of years. We are gonna open up this letter to all of the members of the Senate and hopefully, before we find out, we’re all waiting to see what happens in the six days that are looming for all these secret holds, if people step up into the sunshine. If they don’t, in the meantime we hopefully will get unanimous support from the United States Senators that secret holds are now out of fashion and no longer gonna be tolerated in the United States Senate…

Secret holds redux

22 Thursday Apr 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

Claire McCaskill, GOP obstructinism, Kit Bond, missouri, nominations, Secret holds, Sheldon Whitehouse

Yesterday, I wrote about Claire McCaskill’s war on the secret holds that Senate Republicans have placed on President Obama’s nominees for judicial and government positions – just one of the ways these petty thugs are trying to hinder the administration from achieving its goals. True to her promise, McCaskill, joined by Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), returned to the floor of the Senate last night to ask for unanimous consent to vote on 75 more stalled nominations.

The upshot? Egregious Republican stalling. Senator Jon Kyl (R-Ariz) came to the floor and objected to the request for votes on behalf of unnamed, presumably Republican colleagues.

Since a motion for unanimous consent to vote on a nominee requires the Senator who placed the hold to identify him or herself, and send a letter justifying the hold to be published in the Congressional Record, Senator McCaskill promised that:

… she would be watching the Congressional Record and contacting both parties’ leadership offices to track which Members come forward to reveal their holds in accordance with the 2007 rule. McCaskill said she hopes to either reveal the sources of anonymous holds – or end them all together.

“Hopefully by the end of the week we’ll learn who it is in the Senate that doesn’t want them to be nominated, who it is that doesn’t want them to be confirmed,” she said.

Her goal:

… to pressure Senators “to speak out about their objections so that we can answer them and move forward and get these people to work.”

How effective this will be remains to be seen – what we have now may well be a “let the games begin” scenario. According to Ryan Grim and Ben Craw of The Huffington Post, the Republicans who placed the holds:

…may be able to wiggle out of going public by dropping their holds and picking them right back up, or teaming up with other Republicans and swapping the holds back and forth. It’s never been tried before, so where this is heading is anybody’s guess.

At least in Senator McCaskill we’ve got a dogged participant in the game representing our interests. And perhaps we can exert a little pressure too – phone calls to Senator Bond to express our displeasure with this type of obstructionism perhaps? Some letters to the editors of Missouri papers recognizing Senator McCaskill’s efforts to keep government running, and giving a thumbs down to the Republican performance? Just asking …  

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