Reading Room
Filibusters: Then and Now
Letter to the Editor
New York Times
March 10, 2005
To the Editor:
"The Senate on the Brink" (editorial, March 6) supports the "historic
role of the filibuster," which is a curious position for a newspaper
that 10 years ago said filibusters were "the tool of the sore loser" and
should be eliminated ("Time to Retire the Filibuster," editorial, Jan.
1, 1995).
Federal judicial appointments have certainly been controversial, but
surely all Americans can agree that the rules for confirming judges
should be the same regardless of which party has a majority.
Now you praise the filibuster as a "time-honored Senate procedure." In
1995, when Bill Clinton was president, you called it "an archaic rule
that frustrates democracy and serves no useful purpose."
You disparage the Republicans' view that 51 votes should be enough for
judicial confirmation. Yet the 51-vote rule is a consistent Senate
tradition. By calling for an end to filibusters, the Senate is simply
contemplating restoring its traditions by traditional methods you
disparage as "nuclear," even though they were once endorsed by such
leading Democrats as Senators Edward M. Kennedy, Charles E. Schumer and
Robert C. Byrd.
John Cornyn
U.S. Senator from Texas
Washington, March 7, 2005