http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...ibuster17.html
Originally published May 16, 2012 at  8:06 PM | Page modified May 17, 2012 at  3:18 PM                                                                                                                                                                              
                                                                                                      
Is the filibuster constitutional?
The Senate procedure, which requires 60 votes  to halt, has become the minority party's weapon of choice. But a  watchdog group contends the Founding Fathers opposed such a tactic in  most cases and has filed suit to stop it.
                                                
                                                                                            
 
                                 
AP
                                                                                                  The late Sen. Strom Thurmond, then a South  Carolina Democrat, holds the record for a one- person filibuster. He led  a fight against the Civil Rights Act of 1957 by speaking nonstop for 23  hours, 30 minutes. Other senators helped delay a vote for 57 days,  until June 19 of that year, when the bill passed. Thurmond became a  Republican in 1964. He died in 2003 at age 100. 
                             
                            
          
     
          
                                                                                                                                                                                WASHINGTON —
  One peer-review publication has called Emmet Bondurant "the go-to 
lawyer when a business person just can't afford to lose a lawsuit."
  The Atlanta man now is aiming at something much larger. He contends  the filibuster, increasingly used by Republicans since Democrats  regained control of the Senate in 2007, is unconstitutional. And he and  Common Cause, a government watchdog group where he serves on the board  of directors, have filed a federal lawsuit in an attempt to persuade the  Supreme Court to abolish the procedure.
  The lawsuit, filed this week in U.S. District Court in Washington,  D.C., cites the Senate's inability to muster 60 votes to clear  legislation that would allow children of illegal immigrants to become  legal U.S. residents if they go to 
college or  join the U.S. armed forces, and to pass legislation that would require  nonprofits that run political ads to disclose donors. Both bills passed  the House and received a majority of votes in the Senate.
  "While the Senate can set its own rules, they can't be  unconstitutional," said Common Cause President Bob Edgar, a former  Democratic congressman from Pennsylvania. "This is an unconstitutional  provision. A minority of senators representing a minority of the  population of the nation can, in fact, rule with the current system."
  Since Democrats regained control of the Senate in 2007, the number of  motions to end debate, known as cloture, have more than doubled. The  Senate Historical Office says 130 filibusters were used during the  2003-2006 period, when Republicans were in the majority, and 276 between  2007 and 2010. In the current Congress, 84 motions have been filed to  date.
  "It reflects the breakdown of any sense of collaboration between the  Democrats and Republicans," said Tobe Berkovitz, a Boston University  professor of communication. "Whichever party is out of power wields the  filibuster like a mace. Whichever party is in power bemoans the  degradation of Senate decorum due to the filibuster. This has made the  world's foremost deliberative body increasingly more dysfunctional."
  In a 2011 article in the Harvard Law School's Journal on Legislation,  Bondurant laid out his case for why the filibuster crosses  constitutional red lines: Essentially, it was a mistake.
  In 1806, the Senate, on the advice of Aaron Burr, tried to clean up  its rule book, believed to be needlessly complicated and redundant. One  change was to delete something called "the previous question" motion.  That was the motion senators used to end debate on an issue and move to  the next topic. Burr recommended axing it because it was hardly ever  used. Senators were gentlemen. They knew when to stop talking.
  Thus, the filibuster was born, allowing any senator the right to  speak as long as necessary on any issue. Still, it would be three  decades — and five decades after ratification of the Constitution —  before the first filibuster was mounted.
  Even then, filibusters were rare. Between 1840 and 1900, there were  16 filibusters. In 1917, the Senate, at the urging of President Woodrow  Wilson in 1917, adopted the modern-day "cloture" rule, a requirement  that two-thirds of the body must agree to end a filibuster.
  Even with the new rule, filibusters remained an effective means to  block legislation, since a two-thirds vote was difficult to obtain.  Filibusters were particularly useful to Southern senators who sought to  block civil-rights legislation. The Senate in 1975 lowered the threshold  for cloture to three-fifths, or 60 votes.
  Today, Majority Leader Harry Reid says, "60 votes are required for just about everything."
  That, Bondurant believes, isn't what the Founding Fathers intended.  The framers debated — and rejected — the requirement of a congressional  supermajority to pass legislation.
  Alexander Hamilton savaged the idea, writing that "its real operation  is to embarrass the administration, to destroy the energy of government  and to substitute the pleasure, caprice or artifices of an  insignificant, turbulent or corrupt junta, to the regular deliberations  and decisions of a respectable majority."
  James Madison wasn't much kinder. "In all cases where justice or the  general good might require new laws to be passed, or active measures to  be pursued, the fundamental principle of free government would be  reversed. It would be no longer the majority that would rule; the power  would be transferred to the minority."
  In the end, the Constitution proscribed six instances in which  Congress could require more than a majority vote: impeaching a  president, expelling members, overriding a presidential veto or order,  ratifying treaties and amending the Constitution. And, as Bondurant  writes, "The Framers were aware of the established rule of construction,  
expressio unius est exclusio alterius, and that by adopting  these six exceptions to the principle of majority rule, they were  excluding other exceptions." By contrast, in the Bill of Rights, the  Founders were careful to state that "the enumeration in the  Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or  disparage others retained by the people."
  That majority vote also played into another principle: the "finely  wrought" compromise over proper representation. At the time of the  country's founding, seven of the 13 states, representing 27 percent of  the population, could command a majority in the Senate. Today, with the  filibuster, 21 of the 50 states, representing 11 percent of the  population, can muster the 41 votes to stop a majority in the Senate.
  "The supermajority vote requirement," Bondurant argues, thus "upsets  the Great Compromise's carefully crafted balance between the large  states and the small states."
  While the Constitution also says Congress has the power to "determine  the Rules of its Proceedings," Bondurant notes there's precedent for  the Supreme Court to review congressional rules: In 1892, the justices  ruled that while "the Constitution empowers each house to determine its  rules of proceedings," it "may not by its rules ignore constitutional  restraints or violate fundamental rights."
  Maybe all this is a moot point. There's evidence some of the Senate's  most powerful members are preparing to overhaul the filibuster rule.  Reid, traditionally a defender of the procedure, took to the Senate  floor last week to apologize to all the reformers he had stymied over  the years.
  "The rest of us were wrong," he said. "If there were anything that  ever needed changing in this body, it's the filibuster rule, because  it's been abused, abused and abused."