When Is A Filibuster Not A Filibuster? Senators Split Hairs Over The F-Word (VIDEO)

Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK) speaks during a floor debate over the nomination of Chuck Hagel on Feb. 14, 2013.

The debate on the nomination of former Sen. Chuck Hagel to head the Defense Department devolved into a fight over semantics on Thursday.

As Republican senators imposed a 60-vote threshold on Hagel’s nomination — a requirement that’s a hallmark of the filibuster — they insisted the f-word didn’t apply. All they were doing, Republicans such as James Inhofe (OK) argued, was seeking more time to gather requested information on the possible future defense secretary.

But if it looks like a filibuster and it sounds like a filibuster, then Senate Democrats thought it ought to be called as such. Democrats like Majority Leader Harry Reid (NV) were befuddled by the GOP’s splitting of hairs.

“If this is not a filibuster,” an exasperated Reid said, “I’d like to see what a filibuster was.”

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