WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden said in a new interview that he supports overhauling the Senate filibuster to require the minority to talk on the floor in order to block legislation, endorsing a momentous change that some progressives say could help advance his agenda.

Biden said senators should have to “work for the filibuster” when asked by ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos if he’ll have to choose between preserving the 60-vote rule and advancing his agenda.

“I don’t think that you have to eliminate the filibuster, you have to do what it used to be when I first got to the Senate back in the old days,” Biden said in an interview published Tuesday evening. “And this is — a filibuster, you had to stand up and command the floor. You had to keep talking alone.”

“Once you stop talking, you lost that, and someone could move in,” he said.

The shift falls short of the full abolition of the filibuster that many progressives have called for. But it aligns with recent remarks by Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., that it should be more “painful” to obstruct bills, and is likely to boost momentum for the idea among Democrats, who have 50 votes in the Senate.

Biden echoed the concerns by some activists that the filibuster was grinding government to a halt.

“It’s getting to the point where democracy is having a hard time functioning,” the president said.

Biden’s remarks came one day after Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., gave a scorching speech against the filibuster, saying that it has “become the death grip of democracy.”

“Today’s filibuster has turned the world’s greatest deliberative body into one of the world’s most ineffectual bodies,” Durbin said on Tuesday, while also backing a talking filibuster.

Earlier on Tuesday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., warned in stark terms that nixing the filibuster would compel the minority to tie the chamber in knots by denying consent required under standing rules for the most basic functioning of the Senate.

“This chaos would not open up an express lane to liberal change. It would not open up an express lane for the Biden presidency to speed into the history books. The Senate would be more like a hundred-car pile-up. Nothing moving,” McConnell said.

He added that when Republicans return to power, they could pass “all kinds of conservative policies with zero input from the other side” without a filibuster, mentioning the defunding of Planned Parenthood, cutting off sanctuary cities, laws against abortion and a “nationwide right-to-work law.”

In the Senate, under the so-called “nuclear option,” a simple majority can change the rules by overturning a ruling by the chair and setting a new precedent. Democrats used the tool to scrap the 60-vote rule for most nominations in 2013 and Republicans, led by McConnell, used it to end the 60-vote rule for Supreme Court nominations in 2017.

A “talking filibuster” would require all 50 caucusing Democratic senators to vote to change the rules. It would set up a test of wills between a majority and an obstructing minority.

Under current rules, the onus is on the majority to find 60 votes to advance legislation; if they fall short, it stalls. A talking filibuster would shift the onus to the minority to hold the floor and speak incessantly until they give up or the majority pulls the bill.

On the left, activists say neutering the filibuster would make way for legislation to overhaul voting rights, gun laws and the immigration system, all of which are unlikely to achieve 60 Senate votes.

“President Biden once again made it clear that he prioritizes his agenda and a functioning democracy over an abused ‘Jim Crow relic’ that clearly isn’t promoting bipartisanship or compromise,” said Eli Zupnick, a former Democratic aide who is leading a progressive coalition to end the filibuster.

In an interview, Durbin said his decision came because he believes McConnell’s plan is to “shut down the Senate” and prevent the majority from governing.

“Having lost the Dream Act to a filibuster five times — I’m tired of it. It is basically discrimination based on civil rights, and we’re just not going to take it and accept it,” he told NBC News. “There comes a point where you ask: What is the value of this body?”

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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