Stall

On Monday, December 21, 2009, 40 Senators attempted to filibuster an amendment to H.R. 3590 and failed.

40 Republicans tried to stall legislation they didn't like.

Senate Roll Call #385:

On the Cloture Motion (Motion to Invoke Cloture on the Reid Amdt. No. 3276 to Amdt. No. 2786 to H.R. 3590).

Vote passed, 60–40.

What does this mean?

It takes 51 votes to pass a bill in the Senate. But it takes 60 votes to end debate. These days it's quite common for the minority party to threaten to filibuster (to debate indefinitely) in order to prevent action on a measure.

A cloture vote is the Senate's way of asking "Can we move on, please?" It needs 60 votes to pass. There are 100 senators. As a result, as few as 41 senators can, as a bloc, bring the U.S. Senate to a standstill.

Still confused?

Why this bill?

Good question. Read more about this bill and decide for yourself if it was worth holding up the business of the U.S. Senate.

Why Republicans?

In the 111th Congress, Republicans tend to vote against cloture because they're in the minority. Historically, the party that is outnumbered wields the filibuster — but they've done so more and more often in recent years.

90 Votes 12.93% Gridlocked

Scoreboard

This was the 36th cloture vote of the 111th Congress.

So far there have been 90 cloture votes out of 696 roll call votes — a percentage of 12.93%.

The 110th Congress (2007–2008) set a crazy record: 112 cloture votes out of 657 roll call votes. That's a percentage of 17.0%! When it comes to legislative inaction, we've got some big shoes to fill.