CONGRESS
Schumer and McConnell agree to organizing
resolution for 50-50 Senate
The final agreement comes after weeks of negotiations
between the two leaders.
By MARIANNE
LEVINE
02/03/2021
09:49 AM EST
Updated:
02/03/2021 10:30 AM EST
Senate
Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced Wednesday that he and Senate Minority
Leader Mitch McConnell have reached a deal on a power-sharing agreement for
governing the upper chamber.
The final
agreement on the so-called organizing resolution for the evenly-split Senate
allows Democrats to take control of committees and comes after weeks of
negotiation between the two leaders.
“I am happy
to report this morning that the leadership of both parties have finalized the
organizing resolution for the Senate,” Schumer said. “We will pass the
resolution through the Senate today, which means that committees can promptly
set up and get to work.”
The lack of
an organizing resolution had created an unusual situation in the Senate, where
Republicans still technically held committee gavels and were overseeing the
confirmation process for President Joe Biden’s nominees, even though Democrats
hold the majority. It also meant that new members of the Senate had not yet
received their committee assignments. Schumer announced new committee
assignments for Democrats on Tuesday.
McConnell
initially asked that Senate Democrats commit to protecting the legislative
filibuster as part of the agreement, which Schumer rejected. McConnell dropped
that demand after Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.)
publicly reiterated that they did not support eliminating the 60-vote
threshold.
The new
agreement is expected to resemble the 2001 power sharing agreement between
former Senate leaders Trent Lott and Tom Daschle. That pact also took weeks to
negotiate. But unlike this year, the 2001 accord was reached before then-newly
elected President George W. Bush officially took office and there was no change
in party control of the chamber.
Senate
Democrats did not win the majority until the Jan. 5 Georgia runoff races, when
Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock won both Senate seats. Vice President
Kamala Harris is the tie-breaking vote for Democrats.


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