How Harry Reid Broke the Senate
The Senate no longer debates or deliberates.

Former Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) died on December 28 after recently being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. He was 82 years old. Reid was one of the most influential Democratic politicians of the last four decades before retiring in 2016. He spent most of that time in the Senate, first winning a seat there in 1986. Reid led Senate Democrats for 12 years (from 2005 to 2016). He served as the Senate's majority leader for eight years (from 2007 to 2014). Only two other senators have served longer in that role: Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.) and Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.). And like Mansfield and Byrd, Reid had an outsized impact on the Senate—and not for the better.
Reid earned a reputation among his opponents as a scrappy partisan street fighter who would do anything to win. He routinely infuriated Republicans with deft parliamentary maneuvering and unapologetic rhetoric. Reid often worked closely with his counterpart, Sen. Mitch McConnell, (R-Ky.) to ensure that the Senate passed legislation that the two leaders, and a bipartisan mass of senators, supported over the objections of liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans. Yet Reid's leadership prowess also helped create the dysfunction that grips the Senate today.
And therein lies Reid's lasting, and tragic, legacy. He skillfully wielded the majority leader's limited powers to make the Senate work while, at the same time, creating the impression that it was bitterly divided between Democrats and Republicans. Reid simultaneously downplayed Democrats' policy disagreements and highlighted their differences with Republicans. And he ensured some bills still passed by setting the Senate's agenda, overseeing important negotiations with Republicans, and then structuring subsequent floor debates to make it harder for any senator, liberal or conservative, to alter or defeat the products of those negotiations.
Reid's skill as a leader allowed him to essentially eliminate genuine deliberation on the Senate floor while ensuring that the Senate still legislated, a balancing act that his successors have struggled to perform.
Reid's tenure as majority leader set the standard for what senators expect of their leaders. That is, before Reid, senators understood the majority leader's primary responsibility to be facilitating the participation of interested senators in floor debates and keeping the legislative trains running on time. After Reid, senators understand the majority leader's primary responsibility to be protecting senators from taking votes they want to avoid, crafting legislative compromises, and structuring the legislative process to ensure that the Senate approves them.
Reid's dramatic transformation of the majority leader's responsibilities is especially striking because senators did not create the position officially until the 1920s. Before then, Senate leadership was provided by senators of extraordinary ability (e.g., Sens. John C. Calhoun, Henry Clay, and Daniel Webster) or committee chairmen. And while the centralized role that today's Senate leaders play first emerged in the 1980s and 1990s, no majority leader before Reid was as intimately involved as he was in all aspects of the legislative process inside the Senate.
Reid's success in altering senators' expectations of the majority leader's responsibilities is even more striking because he led a Democratic Caucus that was beset with widening divisions over major issues like immigration, health care, and guns. As majority leader, Reid kept such party-fracturing issues from jeopardizing Democrats' ability to pass other bills by preventing senators from forcing floor votes on them. The result of Reid's efforts was to create the false impression that the Senate was bitterly divided between Democrats and Republicans when the reality was that there was considerable bipartisan agreement between senators on most issues.
Reid's leadership skill is evident in his creative use of the Senate's rules and practices to tightly control the floor and ensure that nothing happened there without his permission.
For example, Reid pioneered the now-ubiquitous tactic of filling the amendment tree and filing cloture on bills preemptively once the Senate began debating them. Filling the amendment tree blocks opponents of the bill from offering alternative proposals and protects its supporters from having to cast votes that could be used against them in their future efforts to win re-election. And filing cloture preemptively speeds Senate consideration of legislation and often confronts senators with a fait accompli, forcing them to choose between offering their amendments and passing the underlying bill.
Most controversially, Reid set the precedent for ignoring the Senate's rules when he could not use them to his advantage.
In 2013, Reid led his fellow Democrats to invoke the so-called nuclear option to effectively eliminate the filibuster for most presidential nominations. And McConnell and his fellow Republicans followed in Reid's footsteps by using the nuclear option to effectively eliminate the filibuster for Supreme Court nominations and to shorten the amount of time permitted under the rules after the Senate has invoked cloture on a nominee but before a final confirmation vote.
Reid's successors have struggled to imitate his example. They have successfully stifled deliberation on the Senate floor. But, unlike Reid, they have not figured out how to fashion bipartisan compromise on most controversial issues (e.g., not infrastructure). Consequently, today's Senate neither debates nor deliberates. We have Harry Reid to thank for that.
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Dirty Harry Reid. What a cunt.
He and Ibama were caught by a Federal Court in Breach of Contract by illegally shutting down the Yucca Mountain Repository project.
They defrauded nuke plant operators out of money that had been put in a fund since the 1970s for spent nuclear fuel storage.
So thanks to the two assholes, our nuke reactors have SNF pools filling up with radioactive fuel rods.
Theres no crime Democrats wont do.
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Who will reid the eulogy?
President Hillary?
whether u want her or not.
The Insuffrable Cows being set up for it.
No one wants Camel Toe in the Oval Orifice.
Her Oval Orifices gotten too much use already.
Friends, fiends, fellow Romulans, and citizens! I cum here before ye all, not to praise Dirty Harry Reid, butt to bury him! And boy, oh boy, does he DESERVE to be buried!
(Preferably at Yucca Flat / Yucca Mountain, since Radioactively Dirty Harry Reid just LOVED that place SOOOOO very much!)
It will be a harried speech!
Satan?
The fascists no longer think they need to compromise.
No, they KNOW they no longer need to compromise. Killing the filibuster ensured that by eliminating the voice and consent of the minority. It also meant that for something to be called "a bipartisan win", you actually had to convince several members of the other party, not just one.
In a later interview, Harry seemed to acknowledge that he had regrets over eliminating the filibuster, but I doubt it. More likely he was just doing a little penance to avoid Mormon hell.
And while the centralized role that today's Senate leaders play first emerged in the 1980s and 1990s, no majority leader before Reid was as intimately involved as he was in all aspects of the legislative process inside the Senate.
What? Never heard of LBJ?
this is the era of " just making shit up" in the media.
I think its all AI generated.
This idiot writes about Senate dysfunction without pointing out that the GOP used the filibuster with exponential regularity from past Senates after the Democrats retook the Senate in 2006 and continued in that practice whenever after they were in the minority - look at the record. He also fails to note that Democrats gave Bush II actual votes on his major legislative programs while the GOP stonewalled Obama when he was in office. He then fails to note that the GOP failed their constitutional responsibility - it is not optional - to advise and consent on a SC nomination because they wanted to steal a seat from a twice elected President and give it to never elected by the people president.
Let me guess - this clown writer was a GOP senate "aide".
LEAVE HARRY REID ALONE!
You’ll probably be glad of the filibuster in 2022.
I am opposed to the filibuster and have been since it no longer involved debate, but the opposite of debate. As long as the filibuster requires holding the floor, I'm fine with it. As it is is an outrage that voters of all parties should wish to remove. The Senate is almost completely dysfunctional because of it and is where legislation goes to die. Most Americans agree that "they can't get anything done in Washington". This is reason number one and it removes accountability from the system. Unless you have a 60 seat majority - a rare event in modern history - you can't get anything done of a party's agenda, but voters don't usually follow enough to know the Senate minority calls the shots, not the winner of the last election.
Think about it and tell your senators to cut the crap and go back to talking filibusters.
Fuck you, slaver. You'll be crying the hardest if it's dropped and party control switches.
Cocaine Mitch really wants that power.
I've been on both sides of senate control - so have you jerk off - and I am consistent in my view that the current filibuster form is bad practice which robs whichever party wins a majority from their ability to pass legislation and acts to stifle debate - not extend it as was it's original justification. Unlike most of you as evidenced from this discussion, I actually have principles that don't depend on partisan advantage.
Good.
I don't want a party to be able to pass legislation solely because it has a small majority.
I only want national legislation that can garner the support of 2/3rds of the Senate *specifically* to prevent one side or the other from completely fucking the rest of us over because in both cases their party agendas are batshit insane and have no link to reality whatsoever.
Then move to another country Agammamon. Our constitution is specifc on what bills require supermajorities and they are very few in number - treaties, constitutional amendments (only 1 step in their passage), and overcoming a presidential veto.
The Constitution does not prescribe House and Senate legislative rules, something the framers were okay with for decades afterwards, even as they were passing other Amendments. The supermajority [for such things as treaties, vetoes, amendments and impeachments, etc.] rules are minimums and a stopgap against rogue executives, not an exhaustive list or a prescription for daily function. That is left to the bodies to decide.
What you ascribe to is the basis for the House. We don't need two Houses. The filibuster was implemented to prevent one party from running complete roughshod over the other and prevent what we essentially are at most risk for now, which is one party in the majority passing rules that guarantee they remain in power, much like as is done in Russia or China.
Further, it used to all but guarantee that the minority political party at least had a voice. Historically, legislative abuses are not limited to the filibuster and the writer chronicled several invented by Reid as examples. That abuse however, is not a reason to get rid of those rules, but to find ways to eliminate the abuse.
That like many other rules is the toothpaste no longer in the tube. Short of passing an amendment to revive it, it's gone and both parties are subject to the abuse. It's just a question of who effectively outlaws the other party first. My money would be on the Democrats because they aren't quite as bashful in the power grab.
This x 1000
Bluwater, I have not argued against the filibuster, but against the current practice of it which is at complete odds with it's original intent, to not allow debate to be shut down. It is now used to keep debate from happening. You can favor the filibuster and still see the current model as a formula for dysfunction, stifling of issues being debated, and further hiding accountability from the voters.
By the way, the Congress does not have a constitutional right to pass their rules in such a way as to avoid their Constitutional duties, which is what they did with the Garland nomination.
This dipshit is trying to use the Constitution to make a point but keeps on attacking the 2nd Amendment.
I feel your pain, loser.
You might be the dumbest motherfucker in this comment section, and that's a high bar.
When....not If.
Manchins apparently doing so now if he has enough backing to give Obiden his BBB back in Suppository form.
There’s a large forcing function for making new laws, and a small forcing function for repealing bad laws.
The filibuster helps balance that out.
That's incorrect Brian and the volume of bills passed - including ones which may seek to correct already passed bad ones - disproves your contention.
But your lying.
There are no bills that seek to correct already passed bad ones - they only seek to make those bad laws worse.
Laws are passed which change existing law all the fucking time. What are you talking about?
But they make the existing laws worse, not better, so they aren't "corrections".
Yeah... I think not getting things done is the entire point of the filibuster.
No, Cyto, it's original intent was to not end discussion in the Senate, a fair minded and principled purpose, but in it's present form, where no one has to actually debate something being filibustered, is the opposite.
If it hurts your side, it's automatically good, bitch.
Thanks for making clear the guiding principle of most commentators on this MAGA page.
Really? You represent the side who legislatively [officially] still argues for packing SCOTUS, threatens Justices, backs adding Dem states to permanently secure the Senate, nationalizing state voting responsibilities, anonymous ballots, argues feelings are more important than words, and demands papers under some theory that you have a right to demand other people make you feel safe. Kinda beats some guy's comment, huh?
Ending the current filibuster rules and returning to the talking filibuster - permanently, not just this term - favors no particular party but does guarantee that issues will be debated in the Senate and Senators will be accountable to their constituents for their positions. If you like Senators hiding out, you like the current rule.
There are no constitutional rules on how many justices. Given the pact for fairness in the SC nomination process has been broken by the GOP - they stole a seat from Obama and arguably one from Biden by ramrodding Barrett after voting had already started and Trump was a next to sure bet to lose - and that because of winner take all state rules for electors (this is not stipulated in the Constitution), we now have 5 of the 9 SC justices having been appointed by Presidents who the voters rejected. The court is already packed with radical judges not roughly in line with most Americans and so constitutional remedies should be considered.
Adding states is a constitutional process that should be looked at on a case by case basis. As to the current Senate, like the EC right now, it is disproportionally GOP relative to the voters. The last time the GOP Senators represented a majority of voters was in 1996, by .1%. The games you accuse the democrats of have been already practiced by the GOP to great affect.
I consider legislation going to die in the Senate to be a feature, not a bug.
Name something useful the Senate has passed in the last 20 years?
Gas. A great, renewable fuel.
"they can't get anything done in Washington"
If only that were true. I dream of 4 or 8 years in which no new laws are passed and we didn't try to fix past bad legislation.
If anything, the problem is that they reduced the number of votes necessary to override a filibuster. Originally 2/3, 67 votes, in 1975 they reduced it to 3/5, 60 votes.
When parties think that they're entitled to make huge, irreversible changes on the basis of small and transitory majorities, the stakes of elections go up dramatically. That's what's poisoning our politics: The stakes have gotten too high. One lost election can result in ruination.
Filibusters lower those stakes, by making sure that you need large majorities to do big things.
the less congress does the better off we all are. so if everything dies in the senate then we should be very happy.
The senate has no obligation to consent. Yes, they should have actually voted "No" on Garland instead of just putting him out forever, but by acting like they had an obligation to "consent", you have shown your cards as a moron who does not understand the concept of divided power.
Ben, they have an obligation to advise and then ultimately consent if a nominee eventually overcomes their objections. They held no hearings, did not meet with the nominee - who they had enthusiastically had voted for as a circuit judge - did not vote, and their clear intent had nothing to do with advising and consenting but with denying ANY nominee to Obama who constitutionally had that power. It was an outrage which makes the current court illegitimate. In fact there should have been a liberal majority from 2014 until present if the slim GOP senate majority had not ramrodded our now 6th catholic justice down our throats as the presidential was already underway, in a race which her nominator lost by 8 million votes. Their is a reason the president appoints them and it has to do with the court being roughly - though not exactly - in tune with the majority of voters over time. Given the GOP presidential candidate has only won 1 of the last 8 votes - 2004 - the current court is at complete odds with the American voters.
The Senate has no obligation to consent. Consent implies voluntary and the possibility of no. The word you are looking for, but which is absent from the Constitution, is obey.
( thunderous applause)
Dipshit, as I already typed, the Senate is FUCKING REQUIRED TO ADVISE AND CONSENT, the obvious meaning being to consent when a nominee meets their requirements. But until then they must advise. Read the constitution you idiot.
How they advise, and consent or don't consent, is up to them. Run for Congress if you don't like it.
Show me where the Constitution makes this responsibility to advise and consent optional, or where the Senate may amend it's rules to nullify constitutional responsibilities.
You know shrike, wiki has a list of all judicial nominations to the Supreme Court. Multiple times no votes were had. You could educate yourself instead of proving your ignorance.
Doofus, nominees were withdrawn when it became known there were too many objections and the Senate would not consent. That is not what happened with Garland. As I noted, he sailed through his appointment to the circuit court with wide GOP support. His SC nomination was not acted not because of him but because the GOP majority intended to steal a nomination from the twice elected president. That's bullshit and any decent citizen should be able to see that and agree it's bullshit.
PS The theft was in effect from the majority of voters who elected Obama twice, not from him personally. That is the constitutional crime.
It's a sign of left wing delusion that they conclude a constitutional process is unconstitutional.
It's not delusion, it's deceit. Literally nothing Joe writes can be taken in good faith.
Show me in the Constitution where the Senate's responsibility to advise and consent is optional. You can't and your argument is ignorant, hypocritical, and situational because your team got away with one - 2 if you count rushing through the Barrett nomination as her nominator was already and predictably losing his reelection.
Show me in the Constitution where the Senate's responsibility to advise and consent is optional.
What a stupid fantasy that anyone other than hardcore lefties accept this as compelling. the Senate's consent is required and Gorsuch did not receive it. Your word games are laughable and it's a sign of your inability to deal with reality that you think you've found a way around the obvious.
- 2 if you count rushing through the Barrett nomination as her nominator was already and predictably losing his reelection.
More irrelevancies. Trump was president and her nomination received the consent of the Senate. You people are fools.
Another MAGA jerk who can't read. Consent is not required until a suitable nominee is determined and by advising, the Senate has a responsibility in the process of determining SC justices.
Cripes, I've seen idiots before but not as many as these fools so willing to send up the same ridiculous and half baked argument that has already been stuffed.
The Senate has no obligation to consent - no matter what.
They also don't have an obligation to pretend to be considering the matter and can deny consent to any nominee for any reason they choose - including 'we don't like the President's race'.
You may not want that to be the case, you may want it to be one way.
But its the other way.
The Senate has a constitutional duty to advise - "consider" in your words - and nowhere do they have a constitutional right to duck constitutional duties. It's their fucking job.
Let's look at the quote, Joe.
"He shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur; and he shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, Judges of the supreme Court, and all other Officers of the United States..."
In your logic, this means that the Senate is not allowed to object to any appointment or treaty. They must rubber stamp anything and everything the president does. That's hogwash and you know it, as the Senate has refused treaties and appointments so far back that the original authors of the constitution were around to comment on it.
And by the by, Jesse, I'm not saying that they were breaking the law. I'm just saying they should have put names to paper instead of just refusing the vote. On something of such importance, we need the entire Senate to speak, not just the leadership. However, that is my conclusion of what is morally right, not a legal requirement.
Ben, I am not saying they have to accept whatever the president comes up with for a SC nominee. I am saying they have to advise and consent, meaning give him the feedback necessary as to who they will accept and consent to. You and others heer keep ignoring the right and responsibility of advising, which together with consenting make it a working relationship with the president to find justices agreeable to both. Quit focusing on consent as if that is all they are concerned with. Until this event the senate knew their duty and did it. Were there nasty fights, yes, but there were plenty not nasty and the president until then had always been presumed to have the right nominate someone agreeable to him as long as he wasn't nominating a radical or otherwise too distasteful to the Senate. Garland wasn't the problem, they wanted to stop Obama.
Poor Joe. Arguing for reality to change.
He really is a true loser.
The Senates' advice to the president was... "we aren't even going to discuss this nominee".
That's incorrect kcuch. The GOP Senate majority's advise to the president was you aren't going to get a hearing for this guy we approved with a majority of our votes to be circuit judge, so don't waste your time sending another nominee. It's you we are denying
You mean when Reid pushed every vote to cloture despite cloture votes passing at a 90% rate so idiots like you would blindly repeat a political talking point?
Joe matches the calmness of Mike Hihn with the wit and keen observations of Jeff.
The brevity of SQRLSY and the civility of Tony
"SQRLSY and the civility of Tony"
... better exampled by "10 miles from home with severe diharreah..."
What's not optional is the President filling SCOTUS seats without the advice and consent of the Senate. The Senate has no obligation to consent to every nominee the President makes, dipshit. See: Robert Bork.
Bork failed the advise and consent process, but he received it. Read history and the constitution.
Joe, now that doesn't even make sense. Either the Senate can reject people they don't like or they cannot. You can't have it both ways.
Ben, read my lips. This is not hard to grasp. The senate has constitutional duty and right to advise and consent to SC nominations. The Senate GOP majority purposefully failed to perform their necessary duty with the Garland nomination, not because they objected to Garland - if they did, they could have done what was done with Bork - held hearings and voted him down - or they could have told Obama he was unacceptable and he needed to put up someone else. Since their purpose was not denying garland but denying Obama's constitutionally granted power to appoint SC justices, It didn't matter who he would have put up. You finally getting this? That is not "advising and consenting" that is avoiding that duty to keep the president from fulfilling his duty.
they could have told Obama he was unacceptable and he needed to put up someone else.
This is exactly what they did.
I suspect if he had nominated another Roberts or even a Barrett or Gorsuch they may have received a hearing, but they nominated a guy who is amenable to naming and surveilling citizens from school board meetings as terrorists.
Perhaps the Republicans were evil racists denying the most vulnerable of presidents his due, but they ended up being exactly correct in their actions.
kcuch, that was not what they were saying. They were denying Obama a nomination, no matter how centrist a nominee he picked. Garland was approved 77-23 for his circuit judge seat, winning a majority of Republicans, and was a non-controversial and centrist figure on that court. Look it up.
Based upon my knowledge of Harry Reid's leadership of the US Senate, James Wallner's analysis is spot on, while Joe Friday is an idiot.
Speaking of idiots Bill, I'm not sure you have standing to make that call given that I have not spoken of Reid in my posts. I've spoken to the author's one sided article which ignores the recent history in the Senate of GOP cynicism, but more to the bigger issues of SC nominations and the filibuster.
Dysfunction is good, if it kills bills and stops federal action.
"GOP failed their constitutional responsibility", WFT? the constitution does not designate a timeframe. so, no, that is not true. and yes the gop stonewalled obummer because he is a communist whose policy would destroy the country. we should always hope for failure, and assist the failure, when a leftist is in office. we should never support the enemy.
How Harry Reid Broke the Senate with this one weird trick.
*golf clap*
Well played.
Repeal the 17th Amendment.
This x 100. Or just a convention of the states to grab power back.
Can I get a fucking Amen?!?
you could get a psychiatrist for Jesse...
Cite?
"creating the impression that it was bitterly divided between Democrats and Republicans."
Just what Ive been saying.
Libtards are the problem but they create the illusion of Bowf Sidez...
Harry Reid is the finest kind of politician and I only wish we had a thousand more like him. Not that it would do much good, as the voters would just keep electing new ones.
Extra! Extra! Reid all about it!
what u drinking for new years? kool aid?
Lol
Senate leadership was provided by senators of extraordinary ability (e.g., Sens. John C. Calhoun, Henry Clay, and Daniel Webster)
A great Calhoun story surrounds the so called "Tariff of Abominations", a bill that was deliberately designed not to pass the Congress, but still did.
"Springtime for Hitler"
Reid lied to foment hatred as a distraction technique from his greed and corruption. So to sum up he's just like every elected Democrat.
And increasingly just like every democrat voter
Guys, fucking seriously?
Congress was broken long before Reid was born.
Yes, but this doesn't excuse Reid's work in making it worse.
https://twitter.com/TheLastRefuge2/status/1476963122569265162?t=VKkcVbjXd3PI57mRbdpy3g&s=19
Illinois Holocaust Museum Begins Requiring Visitors to Show Approved Travel and Vaccination Papers
[Link]
Do they get yellow stars to wear when they pass?
https://twitter.com/KevinBardosh/status/1476838517007257600?t=vw3gOQ_QM9Yz5ZakoMJ7Fg&s=19
Canada's Justin Trudeau on the unvaccinated:
“They don’t believe in science/progress and are very often misogynistic and racist....This leads us, as a leader and as a country, to make a choice: Do we tolerate these people?"
But that Orban dude is the real authoritarian. Why are you trying to change the subject?
Will no one rid me of this turbulent PM?
Really? Calling for one tyrant to "rid you" of this turbulent PM? It doesn't matter who rules, you still have a ruler. And, "benevolent ruler" (tyrant, king, POTUS) is still the politics of force, NOT reason, NOT rights.
Want that? Then I have a problem with you and all other authoritarians.
Known for 'would do anything to win/unapologetic rhetoric,' the things many people see as being the heart of the issue with why politics are so ethically compromised. Reid's use of those, cloture, and the nuclear option were effective, but he was a hack, a purely partisan ass, as unlikable as any career politician can and should be.
"In 2013, Reid led his fellow Democrats to invoke the so-called nuclear option to effectively eliminate the filibuster for most presidential nominations. And McConnell and his fellow Republicans followed in Reid's footsteps by using the nuclear option to effectively eliminate the filibuster for Supreme Court nominations..." For anyone who thinks that if Harry Reid hadn't invoked the nucelar option on lower federal courts, Mitch McConnell would have allowed the Scalia and RBG seats to stay vacant deuring the Trump administration as long as he couldn't get 60 votes for a replacement--I have a bridge in Brooklyn to sell you.
Really? McConnell is not that creative. He would never have thought of it on his own.
Maybe Reid and company shouldn't have been announcing their plans to eliminate the filibuster for Supreme court nominations back in October of 2016, when they still thought Hillary would be President and they'd control the Senate?
Reid: 'I have set the Senate' for nuclear option
"Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) is predicting a Democratic-majority Senate next year could break out the "nuclear option" to change the rules on Supreme Court nominations.
The outgoing Democratic leader told Talking Points Memo that he's paved the way for what would be a historic change of the Senate's rules, allowing Supreme Court nominees to bypass a 60-vote procedural requirement and be approved by a simple majority."
Whatever the merits of retaining the filibuster for those nominations, Republicans would have been pretty stupid to retain it after Democrats had already announced their intention to abolish it as soon as they returned to power.
Harry Reid was a scumbag liar, just like Schiff, AOC, Nadler, Pelosi, Schumer, Biden, Harris and other scheming Democrats.
In 2012, Reid went on the floor of the US Senate and deceitfully accused Mitt Romney (who was running for President) of not paying his taxes. Reid knew it was a lie, but he didn't care because honesty and ethics always took a back seat to winning elections (according to Reid in a later interview).
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2016/09/15/harry-reid-lied-about-mitt-romneys-taxes-hes-still-not-sorry/
Harry Reid also lied about the extremely low risks of transporting and storing nuclear wastes inside Yucca Mountain (which had long been determined to be the safest and most effective nuclear waste disposal site in the US, and was established as its future site), scared the residents of Nevada, and sabotaged the plan (even though permanent storage is still necessary for decades of up nuclear waste that has been sitting in temporary storage near nuclear reactors, and even though a permanent storage site is essential for future development of carbon free nuclear power).
In sum, Harry Reid was a selfish partisan scumbag whose most memorable skill was lying to Americans in order to elect and reelect Democrats.
WORD!
THEN the dumb fucks hatched a plan to TRANSPORT the SNF waste ACROSS THE COUNTRY TO VERMONT. To store it in granite.
Transport by...mule cart? Train? Truck?
I don't blame H.R. for laws he forced or finessed through. I blame all who vote, who want to be ruled, who want to have their rights and be governed by force, simultaneously. That is illogical, immature, and psychologically weak.
Be your own leader. Self-govern. Reject democracy, i.e., rule by consensus. The mob can be wrong, and often is. It's not uncommon for public opinion to shift back & forth, contradicting.