Strassel: Harry Reid's
Senate Shutdown
The Senate didn't pass a single appropriations
or jobs bill in 2013.
The popular judgment
that Washington's dysfunction is the result of "partisanship" misses
a crucial point. Washington is currently gridlocked because of the particular
partisanship of one man: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. And Republicans are warming to the power of
making that case to voters.
It's often said the
113th Congress is on track to become the "least productive" in
history—but that tagline obscures crucial details. The Republican House in fact
passed more than 200 bills in 2013. Some were minor, and others drew only GOP
votes. But nearly a dozen were bipartisan pieces of legislation that drew more
than 250 Republicans and Democrats to tackle pressing issues—jobs bills,
protections against cyberattack, patent reform, prioritizing funding for
pediatric research, and streamlining regulations for pipelines.
These laws all went to
die in Mr. Reid's Senate graveyard. Not that the Senate was too busy to take
them up. It passed an immigration and a farm bill. Yet beyond those, and a few
items Mr. Reid was pressed to pass—the end-year sequester accord; Hurricane
Sandy relief—the Senate sat silent. It passed not a single appropriations bill
and not a single jobs bill. Of the 72 (mostly token) bills President Obama
signed in 2013, 56 came from the House; 16 came from the chamber held by his
own party.
This is the norm in
Mr. Reid's Senate, and for years he has been vocally and cleverly blaming the
chamber's uselessness on Republican filibusters. This is a joke, as evidenced
by recent history. Mr. Reid took over the Senate in early 2007, and it
functioned just fine in the last two years of the Bush administration. It
didn't suddenly break overnight.
What did happen is the
Senate Democrats' filibuster-proof majority in the first years of the Obama
administration—when Mr. Reid got a taste for unfettered power—and then the GOP
takeover of the House in 2011. That is when the Senate broke, as it was
the point at which Mr. Reid chose to subvert its entire glorious history to two
of his own partisan aims: Protecting his majority and acting as gatekeeper for
the White House.
Determined to protect
his vulnerable members from tough votes, the majority leader has unilaterally
killed the right to offer amendments. Since July, Republicans have been allowed
to offer . . . four. Determined to shield the administration from legislation
the president opposes, Mr. Reid has unilaterally killed committee work, since
it might produce bipartisan bills. Similarly, he's refused to take up bills
that have bipartisan support like approving the Keystone XL Pipeline, repealing
ObamaCare's medical-device tax, and passing new Iran sanctions.
Here's how the Senate
"works" these days. Mr. Reid writes the legislation himself, thereby
shutting Republicans out of the committee drafting. Then he outlaws amendments.
So yes, there are
filibusters. They have become the GOP's only means of protesting Mr. Reid's
total control over what is meant to be a democratic body. It isn't that the
Senate can't work; it's that Sen. Reid won't let it.
Pushed over the brink
by Mr. Reid's November power play—scrapping the filibuster for Obama
nominees—Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell began 2014 with a
rip-roaring Senate-floor speech. On Wednesday he set the record straight on the
Reid tactics that have created Senate dysfunction. He then outlined how a GOP
majority would restore regular order and get Washington working. This is a
"debate that should be of grave importance to us all," he said.
It's of growing
importance to Republicans, who are taking up this theme in speeches and media
briefings—putting greater attention on Mr. Reid's singular role in Washington
paralysis. Asked this week whether the GOP would be allowed to amend an
unemployment-benefits bill, Sen. John McCain quipped: "you'll have to go ask the
dictator." Speaker John Boehner, at a recent news conference, lamented the
"dozens" of House bills that "await action in the Senate,"
while Majority Leader Eric Cantor berated Mr. Reid for sitting on
"bipartisan" jobs legislation.
This brings to mind
Republican Sen. John Thune's 2004 defeat of South Dakota's Tom Daschle, which
he did partly by highlighting Mr. Daschle's obstructionist majority-leader
record. The comparison isn't perfect, since Mr. Daschle was up for re-election
(Mr. Reid is not) and since the obstructionism was more noticeable at a time
when the GOP ran both the House and White House. Then again, the Reid theme is
the sort that will resonate with the GOP grass roots, refocusing their efforts
on a Senate victory.
In an election that is
going to be about ObamaCare, Republican Senate candidates are already
reminding voters that it was Mr. Reid's Senate abuse that created the law. And
in the wake of the shutdown and endless government-created "crises,"
more Americans are worried about the state of Washington institutions, and
eager for change.
"Process"
arguments are hard to make to voters, but Mr. Reid is a face for the process
problem. Demoting Harry
Reid won't in itself fix
Washington. But it would be a grand start—and that alone makes it a potentially
powerful campaign theme.
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