That said, I am all for fighting the quixotic fight, especially in the short term. Why? Because if you make a lot of noise about the filibuster, it could impact short term behavior by Senators inclined to use the filibuster. I do not mean Republicans, who could not care less. I mean Democrats. After all, in theory, the filibuster should not even be an issue right now. Democrats have 60 in their caucus, enough to defeat any filibuster attempt.
While the filibuster is a long term institutional problem for the Senate, the actual problem that Democrats face right now is that it is a crappy political organization unable to maintain party discipline. Let me put it this way, if it was 60 Republicans, there would never ever be a filibuster. And we would not be having any discussions about the filibuster.
In essence, the discussion of the filibuster camouflages the actual problem Democrats face - the political party stinks. The Democratic Party leader is weak and the Democratic leadership in the Senate toothless. And this impacts the Democratic Party's claims to be able to govern.
In the end it means that the Democratic Party can not be trusted in its political campaigns. Not because they are being untruthful in their platform, though they often are. But rather because even if they believe what they say they believe, they can not enact the initiatives they claim to support. In his interview with Ezra, Andy Stern said:
I think its fair to say that at least the Democrats have been campaigning with a dream of having 60 for a very long time. And the American people gave them a gift, and basically they're squandering it. Any organization needs to decide how it wants to hold itself accountable. But to me there's a question of what are the expectations amongst Democrats in terms of governing? What's the social contract?
[. . .] Democrats have failed to create a normative set of behaviors. They rely on rules when they should really act like a party. The fact that they have to change the rules because they cant act collectively is sad. Everyone gets to be the general when they feel their will or their issue or their point of view trumps everyone else's.
Ben Nelson, Mary Landrieu, everybody held up their vote for the purpose of gaining personal leverage. Now, appropriately, Harry Reid has to say this is the nature of legislation. But I never thought the nature was making compromises on rules rather than substance. This was 'I'll use the rule of 60 to gain substantive advantage.' The idea was not that democrats get 60 so everyone can be king or queen for a day. Everyone has been empowered. Why shouldn't Kent Conrad say that he won't raise the debt ceiling unless he gets his commission? It's the culture we've created. When we reward inappropriate behavior, we breed more inappropriate behavior.
Indeed, this is more of a Democratic Party problem than a Senate problem.
Speaking for me only