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BumRushDaShow

(160,061 posts)
Thu Sep 11, 2025, 05:30 PM Thursday

Senate Republicans trigger 'nuclear option,' changing rules to speed up Trump nominees

Source: NBC News

Sep. 11, 2025, 5:11 PM EDT


WASHINGTON — Republicans triggered the "nuclear option" to change the rules of the Senate on a party-line basis Thursday, a move that will allow them to speed up confirmation of President Donald Trump's nominees for key executive branch positions.

The vote was 53-45 to establish a new rule that allows the Senate to confirm an unlimited number of nominees en bloc, rather than process each one individually.

The rule applies to executive branch nominees subject to two hours of Senate debate, including subcabinet picks and ambassadors. It will not affect judicial nominations. Republicans say they'll allow their own senators to object to individual nominees in any given block, but the rule will strip away the power of the minority party to do the same thing.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., initiated the process by bringing up a package of 48 Trump nominees, which under longstanding rules has been subject to the 60-vote threshold. The vote to advance them failed due to Democratic opposition. Then, Thune sought to reconsider and Republicans subsequently voted to overrule the chair, setting a new precedent and establishing the new rule.

Read more: https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/senate-republicans-nuclear-option-change-rules-trump-nominees-rcna230565

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mdbl

(7,337 posts)
14. Something they could have done many times, but always took the high road
Fri Sep 12, 2025, 09:50 AM
Friday

Notice Repugs will sit in the slop like pigs and do whatever they want. As a matter of fact, they should change the republican moniker from an elephant to a pig - covered in slop of course.

bluestarone

(20,282 posts)
3. Well, this is their final knife in our back
Thu Sep 11, 2025, 05:37 PM
Thursday

They timed it perfectly. I'm very WORRIED about our country.

markodochartaigh

(4,001 posts)
4. I, for one,
Thu Sep 11, 2025, 05:38 PM
Thursday

would not be unhappy to hear Democratic politicians offer a mea culpa and admit that they were wrong by taking the high road, and that they will fight tooth and nail for democracy in the future.

doc03

(38,378 posts)
7. Democrats wouldn't use the nuclear option thinking Republicans
Thu Sep 11, 2025, 06:54 PM
Thursday

would use it when they took Congress. They did anyway.

KPN

(16,916 posts)
12. Well, to be fair that was a different nuclear option,
Thu Sep 11, 2025, 10:46 PM
Thursday

but your point is nevertheless valid — and well worth stating imo.




orleans

(36,409 posts)
10. so how can the dems in the senate pull a texas and just walk the fuck out or shut down the senate? nt
Thu Sep 11, 2025, 08:42 PM
Thursday

LudwigPastorius

(13,385 posts)
11. They can't.
Thu Sep 11, 2025, 10:12 PM
Thursday

The Constitution only requires 51 members of the Senate be present for it to conduct business.

There are currently 53 Republicans in the Senate.

Rhiannon12866

(242,803 posts)
13. Murphy: Republicans Are Abandoning Their Constitutional Responsibilities to Help Trump Break the Law - Sen. Chris Murphy
Fri Sep 12, 2025, 05:24 AM
Friday


U.S. Senator Chris Murphy (D-Conn) on Wednesday spoke on the U.S. Senate floor to condemn the nominations process rule change being pushed by Senate Republicans, allowing the Senate to batch an unlimited number of nominees into a single vote.

Murphy warned the rule change abandons the chamber’s constitutional oversight responsibility, emboldening Trump to appoint corrupt loyalists, and slammed Senate Republicans’ repeated willingness to surrender their constitutional powers to enable Trump’s lawless agenda. - 09/11/2025.


LetMyPeopleVote

(169,744 posts)
15. MaddowBlog-Republicans go 'nuclear' to help Trump nominees, invite Democratic backlash
Fri Sep 12, 2025, 08:07 PM
Friday

GOP senators have now triggered the “nuclear option” three times (and counting) in the last eight years. The consequences are likely to matter.

Republicans go ‘nuclear’ to help Trump nominees, invite Democratic backlash

https://www.europesays.com/2406089/

For many on the left, the Senate Democratic minority simply hasn’t gone far enough to stand up to…

EUROPE SAYS (@europesays.bsky.social) 2025-09-12T14:30:57+00:00

https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/republicans-go-nuclear-help-trump-nominees-invite-democratic-backlash-rcna230778

Senate GOP leaders have complained bitterly for months that Democrats have used unprecedented tactics to delay confirmation votes for many of the president’s nominees, including picks for lower-level offices. Those Republican complaints are rooted in fact, and Democratic leaders have largely conceded the point, arguing that Trump is a uniquely radical president; that his nominees tend to be uniquely unqualified; and so these picks require unique scrutiny, regardless of the traditional process.

On Thursday, the Senate GOP majority took a dramatic step to overhaul how the institution functions. NBC News reported:

Republicans triggered the ‘nuclear option’ to change the rules of the Senate on a party-line basis Thursday, a move that will allow them to speed up confirmation of President Donald Trump’s nominees for key executive branch positions. The vote was 53-45 to establish a new rule that allows the Senate to confirm an unlimited number of nominees en bloc, rather than process each one individually.


Ordinarily, changing the rules of the Senate involves a long and laborious process that requires bipartisan support. But the “nuclear option” expedites matters, as one party uses its majority to overrule the chair, set a new precedent and effectively establish a new rule.

Going forward, senators can now vote to confirm nominees (including sub-Cabinet picks and ambassadors, but not judicial nominations) as a group, which will naturally expedite the overall process. NBC News’ report added, “Republicans say they’ll allow their own senators to object to individual nominees in any given block, but the rule will strip away the power of the minority party to do the same thing.”.....

Which leads to the other angle worth keeping in mind: The Senate has become slow, stagnant, ineffective and sclerotic. Significant reforms are, by most measures, absolutely necessary.

Rewriting institutional rules is profoundly difficult in the chamber, but the more both parties see value in going “nuclear” and making changes quickly, the easier the path for reforms that would make the Senate a better, more efficient body.

The Democrats may eliminate the filibuster entirely when they take power.
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