MD

News

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Advertise with us »

For second time in six years, Senate could be evenly split

Published October 24, 2006

WASHINGTON (AP) - Expected Democratic gains in the election raise the possibility that the Senate, for the second time in six years, will end up in a 50-50 tie.

If that happens, Democrats would like to revive a power-sharing deal that was struck in 2001. But partisan passions on Capitol Hill are stronger now than when President Bush took office promising to be "a uniter, not a divider."

Republicans would officially still be the majority party in an evenly divided Senate because Vice President Dick Cheney, in his role as president of the Senate, would give the GOP a tie-breaking vote. But Democrats would surely demand a greater role in determining how the Senate treated Bush's legislative agenda in his final two years in the White House.

Currently Republicans hold 55 seats and the Democrats 44. Sen. James Jeffords, an independent from Vermont who usually votes with the Democrats, is retiring at the end of this session.

The 2000 election resulted in a Senate split down the middle. Democratic leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota became majority leader for just 17 days, between Jan. 3, 2001, when the new Senate was sworn in and Al Gore was still vice president, and the Jan. 20 inauguration of Bush and Cheney.

In returning to the majority leader position, Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.) negotiated with Daschle a power-sharing arrangement under which the two parties got equal numbers of seats and staff positions on committees. Republicans chose committee chairmen and controlled the agenda on the Senate floor.

Lott took some heat from his Republican colleagues at the time for being overly generous to Democrats, but it paid off four months later when Jeffords bolted from the GOP and became an independent allied with the Democrats. That put the Democrats back in control with Daschle as majority leader.

The Lott-Daschle deal stayed intact until November 2002, when Republican James Talent defeated Missouri's appointed senator, Jean Carnahan, in a special election and Republicans regained power. They've held majorities on Senate committees since then.

This time, Democrats may need the help of two independents to reach parity with the Republicans.

Rep. Bernie Sanders, another Vermont independent, is the front-runner in the race to succeed Jeffords. Sanders has always been a member of the Democratic caucus in the House and his office said he would continue to support the Democrats in the Senate.

Democratic Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut appears likely to return to Congress as an independent after his loss to a Democratic challenger in the primaries. Lieberman, in line to become chairman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee if Democrats capture the Senate, is also committed to staying with the Democratic caucus, his office said.

Jim Manley, press spokesman for Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid of Nevada, said that in the event of a 50-50 breakdown the 2001 Lott-Daschle deal "should serve as a useful guidepost for any negotiations" on power-sharing between Reid and Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky).