Filibusters, arcane rules, and obstructions in the Senate.

Between speeches, there are quorum calls, time killers in which a Senate clerk calls the roll at the rate of one name every few minutes. The press gallery, above the dais, is typically deserted, as journalists prefer to hunker down in the press lounge, surfing the Web for analysis of current Senate negotiations; television screens alert them if something of interest actually happens in the chamber. The only people who pay attention to a speech are the ... Full Story »

Posted by Kaizar Campwala - via Dave Weigel, Alexis Madrigal, New Yorker, Memeorandum, Slatest, Columbia Journalism Review, Real Clear Politics, Steve Murray (t), Tshiung Han See (t), Kristi Hancock (t), Shakthi Sivanathan (t), miker1717 (t), Donica Mensing (t), Joe Bonner (t), Jon Mitchell (t), Kaizar Campwala (t), Joey Baker (t), avivao (f), Alex Williams (f), Ray Nichols (f), Kaizar Campwala (f), David Fox (f)

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