"Only allow a bill to be voted on if a majority of Republicans support it." WTF? If there is enough of a minority of Republicans that with the Dems the bill would pass, will Johnson also have to give a formal statement that those in the minority aren't really Republicans so they and their constituents should be ignored?
"Only allow a bill to be voted on if a majority of Republicans support it." WTF? If there is enough of a minority of Republicans that with the Dems the bill would pass, will Johnson also have to give a formal statement that those in the minority aren't really Republicans so they and their constituents should be ignored?
Can anyone make MGT take the basic Citizenship test required of naturalized citizens to see how badly she'd flunk it?
This unwritten rule stems from the 90s, which is why it's called the Hastert Rule. It's much easier to practice when you don't have a one seat majority or a heavily factionalized conference. In the current makeup of the House it makes nearly everything besides messaging bills impossible.
Let us not forget Mr. Hastert left government "service" in disgrace, for reasons somewhat akin to charges (if a bit more salacious) that have been voiced about Hastert's fellow wrestling coach-cum-politician Gym Jordan.
It's just the Republican way. The tyranny of the minority. Allowing a minority of the Republican caucus to stop any bill they oppose, regardless of how popular the bill is among the Republican majority, let alone the Congress as a whole.
"Only allow a bill to be voted on if a majority of Republicans support it." WTF? If there is enough of a minority of Republicans that with the Dems the bill would pass, will Johnson also have to give a formal statement that those in the minority aren't really Republicans so they and their constituents should be ignored?
Can anyone make MGT take the basic Citizenship test required of naturalized citizens to see how badly she'd flunk it?
This unwritten rule stems from the 90s, which is why it's called the Hastert Rule. It's much easier to practice when you don't have a one seat majority or a heavily factionalized conference. In the current makeup of the House it makes nearly everything besides messaging bills impossible.
Let us not forget Mr. Hastert left government "service" in disgrace, for reasons somewhat akin to charges (if a bit more salacious) that have been voiced about Hastert's fellow wrestling coach-cum-politician Gym Jordan.
Didn't know that. Why is it allowed?
As an unwritten "rule" it was not so much "allowed" as it was just adhered to by, in particular, the Republican side of the aisle.
He or She who runs the House makes the rules.
It's just the Republican way. The tyranny of the minority. Allowing a minority of the Republican caucus to stop any bill they oppose, regardless of how popular the bill is among the Republican majority, let alone the Congress as a whole.