Home | Commentary | News | Forum | The Loft | Online Activist | State News | Resources | Classifieds Subscribe | Mobile | RSS | Contact
Breaking News -- Palin resigning as Alaska governor
E-mail this story to a friend
Have comments? Send them to the editor.
Printer Friendly Version
Subscribe for Free!

Rare Tactic May Allow Immigration Votes
By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS
Associated Press
June 19, 2007

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Only in the arcane world of the U.S. Senate could a quirky gambit known as a ''clay pigeon'' make the difference between passage of an important immigration measure and its death at the hands of opponents.

Democratic leaders hope the complex maneuver -- which makes use of the Senate's labyrinthine rules to insist on votes on amendments -- will frustrate conservatives' attempts to derail the embattled immigration bill, instead putting it on a fast track to passage next week.

Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said he would revive the bill to legalize as many as 12 million unlawful immigrants late this week. To do so, though, he needs backing from 60 senators, and a way to guarantee votes on a tentative list of 22 Republican and Democratic amendments whose consideration is seen as vital to satisfying key waverers.

The so-called clay pigeon is how he's expected to do it, under a strategy that was still taking shape Monday.

The tactic gets its name from the target used in skeet shooting, which explodes into bits as it is hit. In the Senate, an amendment is the target, and any one senator can demand that it be divided into separate fragments to be voted on piecemeal.

Under the tentative plan, Reid as early as Friday would launch his target -- an amendment encompassing all 22 proposals -- and shoot it into its component pieces. The Senate would then vote on ending debate on the immigration measure, which would take 60 votes and limit discussion of the bill to 30 more hours. After that interval, all 22 amendments would have to be voted on, with little opportunity for foes to interfere.

Ironically, the move is usually used by mavericks -- not leaders -- to slow down legislation, not free it from a procedural thicket.

Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., used it last year to protest a bill he complained included excessive spending. By offering and then dividing an amendment that targeted 19 items he deemed offensive, Coburn was able to insist on votes on individual projects.

''It's a brilliant way to gum up the works,'' said Robert B. Dove, a Senate rules expert who was the chamber's referee for 36 years.

The maneuver appears to be a relatively modern innovation; Dove said he first became aware of it in the early 1970s, when then-Sen. Jim Allen, D-Ala., a master of parliamentary procedures, used it against a bill pushed by the then- majority leader, Sen. Mike Mansfield, D-Mont.

''I remember people being dazzled when he did this,'' Dove said.

Reid's plan has its risks, chief among them further inflaming the vocal conservative opponents who have vowed to do whatever they can to kill the immigration measure.

Wesley Denton, a spokesman for Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., called the plan a ''stunning'' effort by Reid ''to choke off debate and handpick amendments.'' He threatened that Republicans would unleash the same tactic on the majority in the future.

''I've seen ideas like this really backfire. You pay a price for this kind of thing,'' Dove said, noting that the Senate functions almost entirely on consensus. ''It can be done -- I've seen it done -- but it's a difficult maneuver.''

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

++ Discuss this topic in The Forum

Current rating: 4.2 out of 5.0 (15 total votes)

Please add your rating:

 

++ Check out the GOPUSA home page for the latest information.

Last Updated:
Friday 4:39 pm EDT



Not a member? Click here.
Amsterdam considering bank help for prostitutes by qrayjack
Freedom From Responsibility: A Survey of Civic Knowledge Among Arizona High School Students by qrayjack
July 4th Weekend in the Precinct by Ben_Colder
McKinney held in Israel, to be returned to U.S. by qrayjack
Discuss Issues in the Forum

Action Alerts
Action Alert: Hands Off My Health Care Decisions!

Legislation and Votes
Roll Call Vote - Cap & Trade Bill on passage
H.R. 2454 - Cap and Trade Bill
House Roll Call Vote To permit citizen defense by the carrying of loaded firearms in national parks
Roll Call Vote - Coburn Amdt. No. 1067; To protect innocent Americans from violent crime in national parks and refuges.
Roll Call Vote - Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act

Grassroots Survey Team
View recent survey results
Join the survey team!



GOPUSA Cartoons
Click here!

++ Help the RNC fight Obama and ABC News!

++ The Future of The Republican Party, tell us what YOU Think!

++ ACLU Terrified by Reprint of 140-yr-old Book