U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has announced that he was filing a motion to seek a vote Saturday, Dec. 18, to send the House's "Don't Ask Don't Tell" ( DADT ) repeal bill to the floor.
Meanwhile, Servicemembers Legal Defense Network ( SLDN ) announced Dec. 16 that they will have service members sitting in the public gallery in the Senate chamber until the repeal bill is voted on.
Senator Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., said this week that DADT repeal has 61 votes in the Senate, but he has not indicated how many votes stand ready to vote for cloture. Cloture is the motion that enables a bill to go to the Senate floor despite objections of one or more senators. Such motions, however, require 60 votes and senators will sometimes vote against cloture even though they profess support for the legislation. That was the case in September when Republican Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, voted for DADT repeal in a Senate committee but voted against cloture to send the defense spending bill to the floor.
Last week, Collins broke with her Republican colleagues and voted for cloture to bring the defense bill to the floor, but the vote still amounted to only 57, three votes short of 60. None of the 40 senators voting against cloture last week ( which includes West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin ) have yet announced their intention to vote yes for cloture Dec. 18. The three senators who did not vote include two Republicans: Sam Brownback of Kansas and John Cornyn of Texas, as well as Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas. Lincoln arrived on the floor too late to vote but said she would have voted for cloture. So supporters of moving DADT repeal to the floor for a vote on merits amount to at least 58. One question mark is whether longtime gay-rights supporter Ron Wyden of Oregon, who is scheduled for surgery Dec. 20, will be on the floor for a vote Dec. 18.
Many press reports have focused on Massachusetts Republican Sen. Scott Brown after his spokesperson told ABC News, "Sen. Brown accepts the Pentagon's recommendation to repeal the policy after proper preparations have been completed. If and when a clean repeal bill comes up for a vote, he will support it." She did not make clear whether Brown would vote to bring such a bill to the floor and Brown is one of 42 Republicans who signed onto the Dec. 1 letter saying they would not allow any legislation to the floor until "until the Senate has acted to fund the government and we have prevented the tax increase…."
It appears the Senate has acted to prevent the tax increase, but Reid pulled an omnibus funding bill from the floor Dec. 16 after Republican Sen. Jim DeMint demanded that the entire billnearly 2,000 pages longbe read out loud on the floor before the vote. Estimates were that such a read could take more than two full days and nights.
"We're trying to run out the clock … until the reinforcements get here in January," said DeMint in an interview with Fox News Dec. 15.
But Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., told MSNBC's Keith Olberman Dec. 16 he thinks there is a good chance for the DADT-repeal bill to get its vote Dec. 18.
"We are overwhelmingly likely now to see the end of this terrible discrimination," said Frank. He also predicted President Obama would drop his defense of the law in the courts if Republicans were able to continue filibustering against the repeal.
Sens. Carl Levin, D-Mich., and John McCain,R-Ariz.the ranking party leaders on the Senate Armed Services Committeeannounced Dec. 16 that they had agreed to "drop many controversial provisions that were included in the House and Senate versions of the bill" and "move quickly" to a vote on the Defense Authorization bill. The press release did not state it, but a staffer for Levin confirmed that the DADT-repeal language was one of the "controversial provisions" dropped by Levin and McCain.
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