Arguing that the Senate game has become unfair, Sen. Amy Klobuchar wants to change the rules.
Klobuchar is part of a group of first-term Democratic senators who want to make it tougher to stall bills on the Senate floor through use of the filibuster, which allows a single senator to hold up legislation by threatening to a bout of prolonged speechmaking.
When the U.S. Senate convenes on Wednesday, the group -- led by New Mexico Sen. Tom Udall -- will introduce a bill that would force senators to come to the floor to talk during a filibuster. The bill would also end senators' ability to anonymously place a hold on nominees seeking confirmation.
Klobuchar follows in the footsteps of former U.S. Senator and Vice President Walter Mondale, who helped tighten Senate filibuster rules three decades ago. Mondale, who as a senator led the effort to lower the number of senators needed to break a filibuster from 67 to 60, has jumped in the fray this time as well, writing a recent New York Times opinion piece that called for lowering the number once more to 55. "The filibuster need not be eliminated, but it must no longer be so easy to use," he wrote.
Currently 60 senators are needed to break a filibuster, a tactic for blocking legislation in the upper chamber made famous by the movie "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington."
Democrats aren't planning to drop the number of senators needed to break a filibuster. But like the movie, Klobuchar said she and her colleagues want to make senators talk during a filibuster rather than just use the threat of one to stop bills from advancing.
"We have seen for a number of years that people are playing games with the rules," Klobuchar said. "When people start abusing it by secretly holding bills and secretly holding nominations and judges, you have a problem."
Republicans call it a power grab