Rule allows minority party to block legislation, but GOP is reluctant to scrap it as they could lose majority

Donald Trump has floated the idea of ending the filibuster – a procedural technique in Congress that allows a minority of senators to block legislation from passing – which would make pushing through his political agenda in 2026 much easier.

In an interview with Politico, Trump urged Republicans in the Senate to scrap the filibuster, saying it had become an obstacle to effective governing and removing it would prevent another government shutdown and pave the way for his party to push through its legislative priorities.

Scraping the arcane-sounding legislative device is sometimes favored by the party with a majority in the Senate, but opposed by the other because it allows them to use their minority status to block legislation from passing

Senators typically back off from proposals to end it, because they don’t want to get steamrolled by a simple majority when the balance of power shifts again. Centrists in both parties typically oppose ending the filibuster as a way to defend against partisan political excesses.

  • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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    23 hours ago

    Strikes require a strike fund or they fizzle once the strikers run out of savings, and who has savings these days? There’s already a general strike ready to trigger once enough people commit.

    Protests take time to organize. More frequent protests will be much smaller, and therefore easily ignored.

    It turns out, organizing millions of people takes a substantial amount of time, effort, and resources.