


Republicans can vote to keep the lights on. This explains just how afraid Republican lawmakers are of the people who elected them-the same people they will need to appease if they want to keep their jobs. Polls show Democratic voters are more likely to find compromise an appealing quality in a candidate, with 31% of Republicans telling that Bipartisan Policy Center/ Morning Consult poll last month that they’d reward candidates who stuck to their position and pushed the party line, a view shared by 23% of Democrats. But to claim Washington is working in its most efficient way ignores this unfortunate reality: most Republicans feel handing any marginal victories to Biden can hurt them with their own voters.

Democrats found them for the Violence Against Women Act renewal, and they might harangue them again on a drug-pricing bill or an electoral integrity plan. ( Sometimes, even that has been a white-knuckle final push, though.)įor big-impact promises without a filibuster rewrite, Democrats still have to find 10 amenable Republicans, and they aren’t exactly rushing to compromise. Keeping the lights on isn’t nothing, but that’s pretty much the bare minimum the public expects Congress to accomplish. Which is why Politico’s assessment-and Schumer’s boast of getting more done with 50 votes than Republican Leader Mitch McConnell accomplished with 53 votes-misses a major caveat. Life would get much easier without needing 60 votes for most of the agenda.īut two Democrats voted against changing the filibuster rules, dooming much of Biden’s remaining agenda. Lawmakers in his party in January-many of whom quietly wanted to preserve the pocket veto should Republicans reclaim their majority in fall’s election-still stood behind Biden. Biden broke with his own long history of defending the filibuster earlier this year for a specific voting-rights bill. Without 10 Republicans joining a unified Democratic front, a single lawmaker can shelve the final vote. Part of the limit on Democrats’ success is the filibuster, a Senate tradition that requires 60 Senators to say they’ve heard enough debate and are ready to vote. Several of Biden’s nominees have been spiked, including his pick for the Federal Reserve just this week because of Manchin’s worry she sees the economy and climate crisis as interconnected. His infrastructure and social-safety ‘Build Back Better’ agenda is pretty much dead at the hands of aggressively centrist Sen. Longtime pals in the other are intractable. Even nominal allies inside his party are unreliable. The blockades were broken up by police last week and more than 100 arrests were made.That isn’t to say that Biden’s getting everything on his wishlist through a Congress that gives his fellow Democrats the thinnest of majorities. Canadian border crossing and flooded the streets of the capital, Ottawa, for weeks to protest the Canadian government's pandemic restrictions. The Canadian trucker protests shut down the busiest U.S. The application states attendance can range anywhere between 1,000 to 3,000 people. National Parks Service Spokesperson Mike Litterst told FOX 5 on Wednesday a request for a March 1st demonstration around the Sylvan Theater in support of the trucker convoy has not been approved yet.
#Dc gridlock drivers#
Some tow drivers want to conceal their DOT information on their trucks and conceal their company name. The Congresswoman met with Capital Police leadership on Wednesday and told FOX 5 there was a discussion about potentially not having enough heavy-duty tow trucks. D.C.'s Mayor Muriel Bowser is also monitoring the situation and will work with other officials in the area. region to avoid the area when the trucker protests make their arrival. Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton advised residents in the D.C.
