בעסענט זאגט אז רעפובליקאנער דארפן ענדיגן ווי שנעלער מיט די פיליבאסטער
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has issued one of the most forceful warnings yet about the Senate filibuster, arguing that Republicans should eliminate the rule if Democrats trigger another government shutdown on January 30, 2026. In a televised interview and a follow-up Washington Post op-ed, Bessent said continued obstruction has cost Americans too much—economically, politically, and morally—and must come to an end.
Bessent noted that the most recent shutdown inflicted an estimated $11 billion in economic damage, delaying federal paychecks, stalling business contracts, complicating airline operations, and shaking consumer confidence. He accused Senate Democrats of deliberately manufacturing the crisis to stop President Trump’s agenda, citing commentary from New York Times columnist Ezra Klein acknowledging that Democrats’ “explicit strategy” is to block progress, even at national expense.
“The filibuster is not in the Constitution. It was an accident of congressional history,” Bessent wrote, arguing that an outdated procedural rule should not override the will of American voters. If Democrats once again hold the government hostage, he said, Republicans have a responsibility—not just a right—to “immediately abrogate the filibuster.”
For supporters of the Trump Administration, Bessent’s call reflects a growing realization that Washington cannot function when one party uses procedural trickery to prevent legislation, judicial confirmations, or security funding. Elections are supposed to have consequences. Instead, Democrats have weaponized the shutdown threat to stall border enforcement, economic reforms, and national security initiatives that voters overwhelmingly supported.
The filibuster has long been defended as a tool of bipartisanship, but in reality, it has become a shield for dysfunction. Bessent argues that ending it would restore accountability—forcing lawmakers to debate openly, vote transparently, and answer to the people rather than hide behind procedural gridlock.
As January approaches, pressure is mounting in Washington. If Democrats once again choose chaos over governance, Republicans may decide that the era of minority veto power has reached its rightful conclusion. For millions of Americans who want stability, growth, and effective leadership, Bessent’s message is clear: the government must serve the people—not partisan sabotage.
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