Horatius
NWO Kitty Wrangler
- Joined
- May 9, 2006
- Messages
- 29,691
Now my question is, will they object to Arizona, go into separate sessions, then Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin extending this out to ten hours or what?
If they continue this over and over again will there be motions to call the previous question and will they successfully cut off hours and hours of debate.
My guess is the Trumpsters will be doing a lot of rehearsed lying, so the Democrats need to plan for contingencies having well written speeches to demonstrate their positions and expose the GOP for encouraging this sort of thing.
They also need to follow the Chicago Way. "You send one of ours to a vote? We send two of yours to the floor!". Then keep upping the number.
From what was posted earlier, they announce the votes in alphabetical order by state:
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
The bold states are the "controversial" ones the Republicans are going to whine about. Okay, let them pull the trigger on this, wait for them to get to Arizona at #3. If they force a vote, then Arkansas and Florida each get a vote.
That puts us 6 hours into a normally fairly short process, and shows the GOP that the Dems are willing and able to play stupid games twice as long as they are. But the very next vote is Georgia - after 6 hours of this, will the GOP be willing to go for another 6 hours, by challenging Georgia?
Except it won't be 6 hours. The Dems up the ante, and object to all of Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, and Kansas. That's a total of 10 hours. That's more than a full workday all by itself, and means they've now been at this for a minimum of 16 hours already. If they start at 9AM, it's now 1AM. As the question of Kentucky comes up, everyone breathes a sigh of relief as the DEMs let it go.
Until Nevada comes up, of course. Have the GOPer broken yet? Yes, then we move on. No? Then we play silly buggers again. And we up the stakes, to keep them on their feet. New Hampshire and New York are challenged just to make them think "WTF?" (**** it, it's their turn to be confused!). Then of course it's North Carolina, North Dakota, and Ohio in "quick" succession. All of that adds up to anther 12 hours of nonsense.
We skip Oklahoma and Oregon, give them a sense that there may be a way out of this. But when Pennsylvania comes up for a vote, every Democrat there stands up in unison, and starts chanting, "13 more times! 13 more times!" Let them know, you're willing to spend more than a full day more if they keep being jerks.
