Trump vill ta till ”nuclear option” för att ändra regler
USA:s president Donald Trump vill att Republikanerna använder det så kallade ”nuclear option” (”kärnvapenalternativet”) om dödläget i förhandlingarna om budgetpengar fortgår i senaten. Det skriver han på Twitter.
Betydelsen av det är att man går fram med ett mer långsiktigt förslag som bara kräver enkel majoritet, 51 röster. För att få igenom bestämmelser om finansiering av federala myndigheter krävs i normalfallet tre femtedelars majoritet, det vill säga 60 av 100 senatsröster.
En sådan lösning avvisas av Trumps eget parti.
”Republikanerna är emot att förändra reglerna”, meddelade en av talesperson för den republikanske majoritetsledaren Mitch McConnell i ett mejl, enligt Reuters.
bakgrund
”Nuclear option”
Wikipedia (en)
The nuclear option (or constitutional option) is a parliamentary procedure that allows the United States Senate to override a rule - notably the 60-vote rule to close debate - by a simple majority of 51 votes, rather than the two-thirds supermajority normally required to amend the rules. The option is invoked when the majority leader raises a point of order that only a simple majority is needed to close debate on certain matters. The presiding officer denies the point of order based on Senate rules, but the ruling of the chair is then appealed and overturned by majority vote, establishing new precedent.
This procedure effectively allows the Senate to decide any issue by simple majority vote, regardless of existing procedural rules such as Rule XXII which requires the consent of 60 senators (out of 100) to end a filibuster for legislation, and 67 for amending a Senate rule. The term "nuclear option" is an analogy to nuclear weapons being the most extreme option in warfare.
The nuclear option has only been used in practice twice. In November 2013, Senate Democrats used the nuclear option to eliminate filibusters on executive branch nominations and federal judicial appointments other than those to the Supreme Court. In April 2017, Senate Republicans used the nuclear option to eliminate the exception for Supreme Court nominees, after the nomination of Neil Gorsuch failed to meet the requirement of 60 votes for ending the debate.
The threat to use it dates back at least to 1917, in opinions related to reform of the Senate's filibuster rules. Subsequently, an opinion written by Vice President Richard Nixon in 1957 concluded that the U.S. Constitution grants the presiding officer the authority to override existing Senate rules. The option was used to make further rule changes in 1975.
As of January 2018, a three-fifths majority vote is still required to end debates on legislation.
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