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Stories tagged with “Dick Durbin

Justice

No. 2 Senate Democrat Endorses Filibuster Reform

The single most important decision the Senate will make in the next two years will likely be whether to abolish or at least strictly curtail the minority’s power to veto any bill or nomination via a filibuster. This one decision, which Senate Democrats must make as soon as the new senators-elect are sworn in this January, is likely to decide whether President Obama can confirm a nominee — any nominee — to the Supreme Court, whether Obama’s next slate of cabinet officials represent the best public servants in the country or the best public servants who have never said a single word that can be used to embarrass the president, and whether Mitch McConnell — a man who said that kicking Obama out of office is his top priority — retains his iron grip on the Senate chamber.

In an interview with MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow last night, Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) indicated that he gets just how important this decision will be:

MADDOW: If it turns out that Republicans don’t feel any differently about you guys than they did the past few years, is there a prospect for filibuster reform in the Senate?

DURBIN: It depends on the numbers of Democratic senators elected as to whether there will be filibuster reform. I have taken an look at some of the proposals. I think we need them. Consider in the last six years, we have had 380 Republican filibusters. In the six years of LBJ when he was the leader in the 60s, there was one filibuster. They’ve abused it to the point now where the Senate is a shell of its former self. It needs to be functional. We need reform that makes a filibuster count. Stick around. Don’t go out to dinner and tell us you’ll be back in 30 days — 30 hours — whatever it happens to be.

Watch it:

Durbin now joins Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) among the high-ranking Senate Democrats who support filibuster reform.

LGBT

The 11 Most Pro-Gay U.S. Senators

Senators Daniel Akaka (D-HI) and Patty Murray (D-WA)

Senators Daniel Akaka (D-HI) and Patty Murray (D-WA)

In recent days, ThinkProgress has identified the most pro- and anti-LGBT members of the U.S. House of Representatives. While in this Congress anti-gay forces have been relatively quiet in the Senate — only Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-OK) has proposed an overtly anti-LGBT bill or resolution — Senators in support of equality have proposed sixteen bills pro-LGBT bills since the start of 2011. Eleven Senators have sponsored or co-sponsored at least ten of those measures.

Senators Daniel Akaka (D-HI), John Kerry (D-MA), and Patty Murray (D-WA), tied for the honor of most pro-LGBT Senator: they put their names on 13 of the 16 bills each. Akaka, a fourth-term Senator who will retire at the end of 2012, authored the Health Equity and Accountability Act of 2012 (a bill to improve tracking of health data for LGBT people and other minority groups). Murray, a fourth-term Senator, spells out on her LGBT issue webpage that “Equal protection under the law is a fundamental right in our country. No one should suffer discrimination because of their race, color, religion, national origin, age, sex, sexual orientation, or gender identity.” And Kerry, now in his fifth term in the Senate, is chief sponsor of the Reconnecting Youth to Prevent Homelessness Act of 2011 (which seeks to help at-risk LGBT youth) and the HOME Act of 2011 (which protects LGBT citizens from housing discrimination).

Eight other Senators — seven Democrats and one independent — signed on to at least 10 pro-LGBT proposals, putting them just behind Akaka, Kerry, and Murray. They are:


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Security

Sen. Durbin: GOP Presidential Candidates ‘At War With Islam’

Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) on Monday accused the Republican presidential field of incendiary rhetoric that did not match the level-headed tone in combating terrorism laid out by President George W. Bush and continued under President Obama. Appearing on CNN, Durbin was responding to the GOP candidates’ criticism that Obama’s apology to Afghans for the inadvertent burning of Muslim holy books was “unacceptable,” as former Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA) put it.

Durbin said the Bush “got it right” when “(h)e said our war is not with the religion of Islam.” Instead, he said, “Our war is with those who would distort [Islam] and turn it into terrorism.” Durbin went on to say that this was a “guiding principle” that “was adopted by President Obama.” He then drew a distinction with the GOP presidential field, and CNN commentator Will Cain asked him to clarify:

DURBIN: Now, listen to these Republican candidates for president. They’re at war with Islam. What the president is trying to do is to calm down –

WILL CAIN: Senator Durbin, I haven’t heard one thing that backs up what you suggest. Just give me an example, how are they at war with Islam?

DURBIN: Newt Gingrich saying that the president is guilty of appeasement. [...] What you listen to is incendiary rhetoric coming out in a very delicate situation. Lives are at stake here. The president is showing leadership. The president is stepping up, trying to calm a situation. These three candidates are coming on television doing the opposite.

Watch the video:

Indeed, Durbin is right. Much of the GOP presidential campaign has been steeped in Islamophobic rhetoric. Gingrich has said he would single out Muslims by advocating for an unconstitutional federal law that would criminalize some practices of being Muslim in America. Santorum has endorsed Muslim profiling at airports, and has said Muslims don’t believe in equality. In 2007, Mitt Romney reportedly said he wouldn’t consider Muslim candidates for a cabinet position.

Regarding Obama’s apology for the mistaken Quran burnings in Afghanistan, Media Matters noted that many conservative pundits said Obama was right to apologize, and added that Bush had also apologized for cultural transgressions in the course of the two wars his administration started. As for Obama, he’s had his own rather strikingly effective response to the charge of “appeasement.”

NEWS FLASH

Senators Push For Syria’s Assad To Be Charged With Crimes Against Humanity | Four Democratic senators urged U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Susan Rice to push the U.N. Security Council to refer Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad to an international war crimes tribunal because of a brutal seven-month crackdown against massive and largely unarmed anti-government protests. “It is paramount that the Security Council refers credible allegations of crimes against humanity by President Bashar al-Assad’s regime to the International Criminal Court,” wrote Sens. Barbara Boxer (CA), Benjamin Cardin (MD), Dick Durbin (IL), and Robert Menendez (NJ), in a letter to Rice. “The people of Syria deserve to know that the people of the United States understand their plight, stand behind them, and will work to bring justice to their country.”

Climate Progress

As Obama Lifts Meaningless ‘Cloud Of Uncertainty,’ Durbin Fights The Storms Of Climate Change

Last night, President Obama claimed his debt ceiling deal as lifting the “cloud of uncertainty that hangs over our economy.” While he expresses concern for the political weather, the actual weather — poisoned by carbon pollution — is growing more devastating. The drastic cuts in federal investment that are requirements of the debt deal will leave the nation in deadly peril from our superheated climate, just as full mobilization is needed.

Last week, Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) brought attention to the deadly scourge of severe weather fueled by climate change, and the federal government’s troubling lack of readiness. In an appropriations subcommittee hearing on budgeting for federal disaster assistance attended only by himself — Sen. Jerry Moran (R-KS) appeared only to give an opening statement, but left without asking witnesses questions — Durbin interviewed top climate scientist Donald Wuebles, NOAA deputy administrator Dr. Kathryn Sullivan, and representatives from the Small Business Administration and the private re-insurance industry. Durbin discussed the extraordinary damage to the nation from climate disasters in the first seven months of 2011, before asking whether the federal government is actually ready:

We’ve seen droughts in Texas, wildfires in Arizona and New Mexico, flooding in Tennessee, and according to Sen. Moran, both in his state, drought and flooding. Today, there are excessive heat warnings in twenty communities throughout Kansas, Sen. Moran’s home state, and flood warnings along the Missouri River. In 2011, almost $28 billion in damages have already been caused by catastrophic events, and the hurricane season is just starting. The economic impact of severe weather events is only projected to grow in future years as the frequency and intensity of weather events continues to grow.

The weather is getting worse and more violent. Catastrophic, in fact. The federal government needs to do more to be ready to protect federal assets and provide disaster assistance on an increasing frequency. Are we ready?

Watch it:

“I’m not sure the federal government is thinking ahead when it comes to our preparedness for disasters,” Durbin continued, with extreme understatement. Dr. Wuebles explained that because oceans can store vast amounts of heat, the changes in climate we are now seeing are the result of the pollution added twenty years ago — which means that failure to act now will doom future generations to an unimaginably deadly world.

We’ve stopped talking about this on Capitol Hill,” Durbin concluded. “We’ve decided that the debate over global warming is too contentious. I think it’s a big mistake.”

Yglesias

Durbin Backs Filibuster Reform

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Dick Durbin, the number two Democrat in the Senate hierarchy, seems open to filibuster reform judging by his remarks to TPM DC’s Brian Beutler:

“Here we were with amendments on Wall Street reform. 28 amendments by majority vote. I want to offer an amendment on credit card fees, and they say, ‘Oh that’ll be 60.’ Well where did that come from?” Durbin said.

Durbin’s amendment ultimately passed, but, he said, “the 60 was designed for me to lose. I won instead.”

“But the point is, if you can just out of the blue say, ‘Uh that’s not a majority, that’s 60,’ and not have any basis other than if you don’t we’ll filibuster, it really reaches the point where this place isn’t on the square. And I think it should be.”

Leadership offices don’t “matter” in the vain & egomaniacal Senate the same way they do in the House of Representatives, so Durbin’s thinking won’t necessarily have a ton of pull. But it does show that there’s some momentum behind this idea.

I think that if you want to talk about the counterproductive nature of progressive apathy then you have to talk about this filibuster reform effort. It’s 100 percent true that progressive policy becomes less likely, rather than more likely, if progressives become cynical, apathetic, disillusioned, and blind to the very real achievements of the 111th Congress. But at the same time, there’s an iterative relationship between political leaders and their supporters. Leaders can’t just point to the policy accomplishments of yore and say “stop whining” they need to join with activists in fighting for further change. Appointing Elizabeth Warren would boost morale, and beginning to organize for reform of Senate procedure would as well. If you tell people “we did the best we could, but the structure of the Senate hemmed us in” then people get depressed. If you say “we did the best we could but the structure of the Senate hemmed us in and that’s why I’m fighting to reform the Senate and deliver the reforms we all believe in” then people have something to hang on to.

Yglesias

Senator Dick Durbin Talks to Pat Garofalo About Housing Policy

Interesting stuff as my colleague Pat Garofalo sits down for a brief chat with Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL) and they talk about “cramdown” legislation and other possible options for stemming home foreclosures:

It’s really remarkable how much political clout the big banks retain notwithstanding everything that’s happened. And it certainly makes you pessimistic that regulatory changes currently being contemplated are going to stick. How much clout are these guys going to have once the financial crisis is a few years in the rearview?

Yglesias

Huckabee Making Strong Bid to Lose “Likeable Conservative” Credentials

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I met Mike Huckabee once, briefly, and he was extremely charming. He offered up more of what I’d seen in the best of Mike Huckabee on television—a charismatic, friendly guy who laced his conservatism with real Christian values like generosity and humility. And then there’s this guy:

“The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics may be dead,” said Huckabee, “but a Union of American Socialist Republics is being born.” Democrats, according to Huckabee, were packing 40 years of pet projects like “health care rationing” into spending bills. “Lenin and Stalin would love this stuff.”

Steve Benen says “I suspect that if a prominent Democratic office holder, in 2005, delivered a speech referring to George W. Bush’s agenda as “fascism,” comparing his administration to totalitarian regimes, and casually throwing in a reference to Hitler, that Democrat would have a very difficult time being taken seriously by the political establishment moving forward.” Indeed, recall that when Dick Durbin compared American mistreatment of detainees to maltreatment of prisons in the Gulag, we was pressured into offering a groveling apology. In Durbin’s case, though, one could see the point of the comparison.

Why Huckabee thinks that federally funded research into determining which medical treatments are effective is similar to being a totalitarian mass-murderer is a bit beyond me. But it’s par for the course in the uglier corners of conservatism, they’re just not corners Huckabee’s been known for dwelling in.

Yglesias

Durbin on Democracy and Inequality

I got a chance to talk to Senator Dick Durbin around midday and asked him if the current mess prompts any reflections on the broader issues of inequality in the American landscape. He offered a pretty strong thematic answer:


I would say something a bit more literal: The growth in consumption inequality has been much smaller than the growth in income inequality. In general, increasing access to credit has done a lot to help compensate for sluggish or nonexistent income growth for the middle class. And make no mistake — access to credit is a real benefit. But insofar as that increased access to credit was built on something of a house of cards, as now seems to be the case, we won’t be able to rely on that in the future to provide people with a decent standard of living. We need to do something to boost the real fundamentals of our economy — the wages available to ordinary Americans (more on this from Durbin in a later video clip).

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