Ever wonder how 60 votes can stop 51 from passing a bill? We pull back the curtain on the modern filibuster to show how Senate procedure—not the Constitution—decides whether a majority can actually govern. We trace the shift from the old, talk‑until‑you‑drop tactic to today’s cloture threshold and explain when a simple majority can change the rules, when it can’t, and how the nuclear option carved out exceptions for nominations and budget matters. It’s a candid look at principle versus pruden...
All content for The WallBuilders Show is the property of Tim Barton, David Barton & Rick Green and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Ever wonder how 60 votes can stop 51 from passing a bill? We pull back the curtain on the modern filibuster to show how Senate procedure—not the Constitution—decides whether a majority can actually govern. We trace the shift from the old, talk‑until‑you‑drop tactic to today’s cloture threshold and explain when a simple majority can change the rules, when it can’t, and how the nuclear option carved out exceptions for nominations and budget matters. It’s a candid look at principle versus pruden...
Flipping the Forgotten States - with Chad Connelly
The WallBuilders Show
26 minutes
1 month ago
Flipping the Forgotten States - with Chad Connelly
A handful of votes can flip a legislature, and a handful of courageous pastors can flip the script. We’re fresh off a Northeast swing—Maine, New Hampshire, and beyond—where young pastors are packing rooms, voter ID is on the ballot, and churches are waking up to how close margins really are. One state rep told us Maine missed a legislative majority by just 200 votes. Opponents of voter ID admitted they could lose 13,000 “reliable” votes if it passes. Those numbers aren’t abstract; they’re a r...
The WallBuilders Show
Ever wonder how 60 votes can stop 51 from passing a bill? We pull back the curtain on the modern filibuster to show how Senate procedure—not the Constitution—decides whether a majority can actually govern. We trace the shift from the old, talk‑until‑you‑drop tactic to today’s cloture threshold and explain when a simple majority can change the rules, when it can’t, and how the nuclear option carved out exceptions for nominations and budget matters. It’s a candid look at principle versus pruden...