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Toomey claims he led filibuster—on House floor
Republican Pat Toomey made a statement this week on CNN’s “John King USA” that caught our ear: He claimed that he once led a filibuster… on the House floor. Of course, the filibuster is a product of only the Senate’s rules.
On the show, Toomey claimed:
“Now, when I was in the House, I—frankly I opposed my party very often. I opposed President Bush when he wanted to expand and create a new entitlement program. I opposed that. I personally led a filibuster on the House floor against my own party because I thought they were intending to bust the budget and spend too much money. The record is very clear.”
The Senate defines a filibuster as the “Informal term for any attempt to block or delay Senate action on a bill or other matter by debating it at length, by offering numerous procedural motions, or by any other delaying or obstructive actions.” The Senate historian notes that the House hasn’t allowed filibusters since “the early years of Congress.”
Watch the video below, where Toomey claims he led a filibuster at the 5:30 mark.
TPMDC contacted Toomey’s campaign for clarification. Spokeswoman Nachama Soloveichik told us, “We’ve often called it ‘an unheard of filibuster,’” adding that it was “characterized as such in the press.” She’s certainly right on the first count: a press release on Toomey’s campaign site from May 10, 2010 refers to the incident.
Pat also led an unheard of “filibuster” on the floor of the House of Representatives in 2002 in order to force both Democrats and Republicans to reduce spending (Associated Press, 07/17/02).
We went and found that article on Lexis-Nexis — and the word “filibuster” doesn’t appear in it at all. On the other hand, it does describe efforts by Toomey and Congressman John Shaddegg (R-Ariz.) to stymie passage of the appropriations bill to fund the Interior Department in 2003 because of additional monies added to the bill above the White House’s budget request.
Republican conservatives kept up pressure to trim spending on a House bill providing money for public lands and conservation, saying it was time to take a stand against budget-busting habits.
“These are grave issues. Spending is running out of control in this Congress,” said John Shadegg, R-Ariz., who spoke Wednesday as conservatives readied amendments designed to block progress on the domestic spending bill – the first the House has taken up this year.
“This is not a happy occasion for anybody here,” Rep. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., leader of the conservative rebellion, said late Tuesday. Toomey stressed that he had no intention of giving up his plan to offer one amendment after another.
The proposed amendments were handily defeated, but supporters said their goal was to point out the dangers of Congress ignoring President Bush’s budget recommendations.
The Bush White House didn’t oppose the bill, but objected to House efforts to add $700 million for fighting fires in 2002. The bill passed at 9:42 pm on July 17, 2002 without Toomey’s vote—but after about 16 hours of debate.
Soloveichik then pointed us to an opinion-laden article from July 22, 2002, originally published on the conservative Web site Human Events and archived here, in which then-editor Terence P. Jeffrey congratulated Toomey and his colleagues on their tactics.
They started as a Gang of Four from among the members of the conservative Republican Study Committee (RSC). Pat Toomey (Pa.) was the prime mover, joined by Jeff Flake (Ariz.), Mike Pence (Ohio) and John Shadegg (Ariz.), chairman of the RSC. They devised a strategy to counter the Cardinals [Ed. note: The term refers to the Appropriations subcommittee chairs].
If the Cardinals sent budget-busting bills to the floor early, the gang would launch what amounted to a filibuster. Under House rules for spending bills, members can offer amendments for each line ein in the bill. Every member is entitled to speak for five minutes on every amendment. The gang recruited about 25 RSC members willing to sponsor and speak for amendments. They would stall pork-laden bills until they were cut down to size, or the Cardinals capitulated.
Was Toomey’s efforts to slow passage of the bill by filing amendments a filibuster? By the definitions of the filibuster, decidedly not—regardless of how Jeffrey chose to characterize it in 2002.
Does it show, however, that the Toomey campaign thinks it can make political hay out of his willingness to slow the passage of legislation in the Senate where he could, technically, filibuster?
Definitely.
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Talking Points Memo is an innovative news organization that provides breaking news, investigative reporting and smart analysis of politics. For more stories visit www.talkingpointsmemo.com. (c) 2010 TPM Media LLC. The original version of this story was published here.
August 12, 2010 at 8:00 am
Tags: Pat Toomey














Jim
Aug 12th, 2010
Simple mistake. No different than Obama saying he campaigned in 57 states. When on the campaign trail and giving a zillion interviews, a candidate will make mistakes. The message is what’s important.
David Diano
Aug 12th, 2010
Toomey claiming he opposed his party really translates to:
The GOP wasn’t willing to go as far to the crazy far-Right as Toomey, so Toomey opposed reasonable and moderate stances.
Jon Geeting
Aug 12th, 2010
David’s exactly right. He certainly never opposed his party from the left.
I guess we can be sure Toomey won’t be a vote for ending the filibuster at the beginning of the next Congress.
Anthracite Alum
Aug 12th, 2010
How in this reality can Toomey take pride in using dilatory inane amendments to forestall and ankle bite a bill that has majority and bipartisan support.
Easier and less intellectually challenging to be a glib contrainian that a creator.
who cares
Aug 12th, 2010
seriously who cares? what do they want people to say, “oh snap he got the parliamentarian lingo wrong…you got him good”??
are peoples taxes going up? is the debt tripling? are democrats spending like drunken sailers? the answer to all 3 is yes. call it whatever the frig you want to call it.
sick of it all
Aug 12th, 2010
we all know that toomey is an obstructionist and unwilling to compromise on simple things like fightingg forest fires? he took pride in stripping money froma bill for that? Guys like that are why people do not like Washington–petty fights on innane things in teh name of a supposed greater good…what a dope…guess he thinks most pennsylvanians are dopes…he’s wrong on that and wrong for PA
TB
Aug 12th, 2010
If after November the Senate has people like Rand Paul, Pat Toomey, and Sharon Angle to go along with Jim Demint and Tom Coburn this country is truly screwed. The Senate will be brought to its collective knees by a group of politically naive fools that don’t realize the importance of the federal government.
Vet
Aug 12th, 2010
Unbelievably lame.
Wow, this wasn’t the product of some hyper-educated text-book smart twenty-somethings with no clue about real life, was it?
DaveB
Aug 13th, 2010
This is known as “hyper-WONKiness”
The man is trying to explain to the public in terms they might understand. Yes, it would not earn him a ‘solid B+’ in PolySci401, but it gets his message across.
Try not to take yourselves so seriously.
flynnbw
Aug 13th, 2010
This does serve to separate Mr. Toomey from people like, say, Mike Fitzpatrick, who didn’t do a thing about runaway spending while he was in Congress but is now campaigning on reducing spending.
On the other hand, David is right — this only shows that Mr. Toomey is willing to break with his party when he thinks they’re not being conservative enough! Doesn’t anyone in PA realize how far to the right you have to be to be a member of the Republican Study Committee?
He’s to the right of President Bush, to the right of Senator Santorum, all the way out in Jim DeMint territory.