Martyn4802
New member
From Roy Beck's Web Site..
I have several really encouraging pieces of news that reveal how powerful your daily activism has been these last few weeks. I will send them in my next Alert later today.
Check your personalized Action Buffet corkboard at various times the rest of this week for fax and phone action notes that are created specifically to influence your two Senators.
We already have put up many actions for people in just one state to maximize your influence where needed.
Because there is so much going on at this moment, I will send out separate Alerts to keep them from becoming so long and unwieldy.
Your NumbersUSA Team has just finished a series of meetings today with a number of Senate and House staffers and with Members themselve s and with a wide variety of advocacy groups across the spectrum. The following information is based on what we gathered thus far today.
SENATE TIMETABLE AT THIS MOMENT
Senate Majority Leader Reid (D-Nev.) seems to be changing the schedule several times a day now, but ....
STEP 1: THE START-DEBATE CLOTURE
All of our Senate sources and most on-the-Hill news sources say they do not believe the first amnesty vote will be until next week. That would be the vote on cloture that would allow the Kennedy/Bush amnesty bill back on the floor for debate.
The most common expectation is that the first cloture vote won't happen until Tuesday.
Sen. Reid, however, is still holding out a remote possibility of having the first cloture vote tomorrow night (Friday) after 7 p.m.
So, if we are to keep any other votes from happen ing and kill the bill in the first vote, all of us have to give everything we've got through Friday at 5 p.m. (after that, no phones will be answered until Monday morning).
To win, the following must add up to 41:
Senators voting NO
Senators voting PRESENT
Senators who do not show up to vote
Senate seats that are vacant (presently one seat in Wyoming)
In other words, if you can persuade a Senator to leave town to attend a fundraiser or go visit a sick relative in order to avoid having to take sides, that is the same as persuading the Senator to vote NO on amnesty. For example, Sen. Brownback (R-Kan.) is a long-time amnesty champion who is being hammered on the presidential campaign trail. He managed to miss the cloture vote two weeks ago. The effect was the same as his voting NO.
A lot of your Senators who voted NO on cloture two weeks ago are preparing to vote YES on this first cloture because the pro-amnesty lead ers have bought their vote in exchange for them getting one of their favorite amendments on the floor for a vote.
Other than our anti-amnesty champions Senators Byrd (D-W.Va.), Dorgan (D-N.D.), Sessions (R-Ala.), Vitter (R-La.), DeMint (R-S.C.), and the Oklahoma Republicans Inhofe and Coburn, you should not count on anybody being guaranteed to vote NO on this first cloture.
Step 2: DEBATE AND VOTES ON NEW AMENDMENTS
If we lose the first cloture vote, debate will begin on around two dozen amendments, perhaps on Wednesday, more likely on Thursday.
We will continue to describe those amendments to you and tell you our position at the bottom of our Senate Vote Day Page. You can also always reach that page from a link on our Home page.
But we aren't all that interested in the amendments because even if all the ones we favor w ere to pass, the bill would still be a disaster for America.
That is the argument you must make to your Senators in urging them to forget the amendments and stop the bill from reaching the floor at all by voting NO on the first cloture.
If some of the good amendments pass, it might cause a Senator who is leaning NO to change to YES. But it might also cause a Senator on the other side to decide the bill is no longer open borders enough and end up voting NO. Overall, though, the amendments process is a dangerous one for us.
Do not allow any Senate staffer to get by with saying "the Senator will vote NO on the bill." We need a pledge to vote NO on "the first cloture vote that would START debate."
Step 3: THE STOP-DEBATE CLOTURE
The most likely scenario at this moment is that sometime next Friday or Saturday the amendment process will be brought to a halt by Sen. Reid.
H e will try to stop debate and force a final vote on the bill. He will have to get 60 YES votes to do so.
We have an even better chance on this cloture than the first one.
Step 4: FINAL VOTE
If we lose both the cloture votes -- and also any possible point of order votes that also could stop the bill -- the amnesty bill will come up for a final vote.
While the other side has to get 60 votes to win on cloture, it only has to get 50 votes to win on final vote.
I don't want to be a pessimist, but I feel fairly certain that if we get to the final vote, we will lose.
That is why you must talk cloture, cloture, cloture with your Senators.
That is also why what sounds like really great sounding news this afternoon from Senate Republican Leader McConnell (R-Ky.) may not mean much.
As you may know, McConnell and Sen. Lott (R-Miss.) are the ones who revived the amnesty bill last week by twisting enough Republican NO arms to believe they were close to having enough votes to pass the first cloture.
They are doing this for the Republican White House, as well as for the huge corporate donors to the Republican Party.
But McConnell is up for re-election next year. And Kentucky voters have been hammering his offices about his pro-amnesty work.
Today, he indicated to reporters that he is not at all sure he will be able to vote for the final bill unless a lot of things are changed. One of our lobbyists says it looks like a strategy for him to vote NO on the final vote to tell Kentucky voters he was with THEM, but he may very well vote YES on all the cloture votes to help the bill keep moving for Pres. Bush and the corporate lobbies. The point is that the only NO vote that actually is likely to help us defeat amnesty is on the cloture votes.
So, whether you are in Kentucky or anywhere else, let Senate staffers know th at you will not be deceived by that kind of behavior.
I have several really encouraging pieces of news that reveal how powerful your daily activism has been these last few weeks. I will send them in my next Alert later today.
Check your personalized Action Buffet corkboard at various times the rest of this week for fax and phone action notes that are created specifically to influence your two Senators.
We already have put up many actions for people in just one state to maximize your influence where needed.
Because there is so much going on at this moment, I will send out separate Alerts to keep them from becoming so long and unwieldy.
Your NumbersUSA Team has just finished a series of meetings today with a number of Senate and House staffers and with Members themselve s and with a wide variety of advocacy groups across the spectrum. The following information is based on what we gathered thus far today.
SENATE TIMETABLE AT THIS MOMENT
Senate Majority Leader Reid (D-Nev.) seems to be changing the schedule several times a day now, but ....
STEP 1: THE START-DEBATE CLOTURE
All of our Senate sources and most on-the-Hill news sources say they do not believe the first amnesty vote will be until next week. That would be the vote on cloture that would allow the Kennedy/Bush amnesty bill back on the floor for debate.
The most common expectation is that the first cloture vote won't happen until Tuesday.
Sen. Reid, however, is still holding out a remote possibility of having the first cloture vote tomorrow night (Friday) after 7 p.m.
So, if we are to keep any other votes from happen ing and kill the bill in the first vote, all of us have to give everything we've got through Friday at 5 p.m. (after that, no phones will be answered until Monday morning).
To win, the following must add up to 41:
Senators voting NO
Senators voting PRESENT
Senators who do not show up to vote
Senate seats that are vacant (presently one seat in Wyoming)
In other words, if you can persuade a Senator to leave town to attend a fundraiser or go visit a sick relative in order to avoid having to take sides, that is the same as persuading the Senator to vote NO on amnesty. For example, Sen. Brownback (R-Kan.) is a long-time amnesty champion who is being hammered on the presidential campaign trail. He managed to miss the cloture vote two weeks ago. The effect was the same as his voting NO.
A lot of your Senators who voted NO on cloture two weeks ago are preparing to vote YES on this first cloture because the pro-amnesty lead ers have bought their vote in exchange for them getting one of their favorite amendments on the floor for a vote.
Other than our anti-amnesty champions Senators Byrd (D-W.Va.), Dorgan (D-N.D.), Sessions (R-Ala.), Vitter (R-La.), DeMint (R-S.C.), and the Oklahoma Republicans Inhofe and Coburn, you should not count on anybody being guaranteed to vote NO on this first cloture.
Step 2: DEBATE AND VOTES ON NEW AMENDMENTS
If we lose the first cloture vote, debate will begin on around two dozen amendments, perhaps on Wednesday, more likely on Thursday.
We will continue to describe those amendments to you and tell you our position at the bottom of our Senate Vote Day Page. You can also always reach that page from a link on our Home page.
But we aren't all that interested in the amendments because even if all the ones we favor w ere to pass, the bill would still be a disaster for America.
That is the argument you must make to your Senators in urging them to forget the amendments and stop the bill from reaching the floor at all by voting NO on the first cloture.
If some of the good amendments pass, it might cause a Senator who is leaning NO to change to YES. But it might also cause a Senator on the other side to decide the bill is no longer open borders enough and end up voting NO. Overall, though, the amendments process is a dangerous one for us.
Do not allow any Senate staffer to get by with saying "the Senator will vote NO on the bill." We need a pledge to vote NO on "the first cloture vote that would START debate."
Step 3: THE STOP-DEBATE CLOTURE
The most likely scenario at this moment is that sometime next Friday or Saturday the amendment process will be brought to a halt by Sen. Reid.
H e will try to stop debate and force a final vote on the bill. He will have to get 60 YES votes to do so.
We have an even better chance on this cloture than the first one.
Step 4: FINAL VOTE
If we lose both the cloture votes -- and also any possible point of order votes that also could stop the bill -- the amnesty bill will come up for a final vote.
While the other side has to get 60 votes to win on cloture, it only has to get 50 votes to win on final vote.
I don't want to be a pessimist, but I feel fairly certain that if we get to the final vote, we will lose.
That is why you must talk cloture, cloture, cloture with your Senators.
That is also why what sounds like really great sounding news this afternoon from Senate Republican Leader McConnell (R-Ky.) may not mean much.
As you may know, McConnell and Sen. Lott (R-Miss.) are the ones who revived the amnesty bill last week by twisting enough Republican NO arms to believe they were close to having enough votes to pass the first cloture.
They are doing this for the Republican White House, as well as for the huge corporate donors to the Republican Party.
But McConnell is up for re-election next year. And Kentucky voters have been hammering his offices about his pro-amnesty work.
Today, he indicated to reporters that he is not at all sure he will be able to vote for the final bill unless a lot of things are changed. One of our lobbyists says it looks like a strategy for him to vote NO on the final vote to tell Kentucky voters he was with THEM, but he may very well vote YES on all the cloture votes to help the bill keep moving for Pres. Bush and the corporate lobbies. The point is that the only NO vote that actually is likely to help us defeat amnesty is on the cloture votes.
So, whether you are in Kentucky or anywhere else, let Senate staffers know th at you will not be deceived by that kind of behavior.