One of two Democratic senators to vote against cloture on the
financial regulatory reform bill said Wednesday that she can only
support moving forward if senators vote on her amendment.
Sen.
Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) said that a key amendment deal-breaker for her vote. It was not put up for a vote before Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) attempted to invoke cloture
Wednesday afternoon, which failed.
"They were trying to
get cloture and hoped they could move forward," she told reporters.
"Without this amendment, it's pretty hard to do that."
Asked if
her vote for cloture was contingent on having a vote on the amendment,
she said "yes."
Cantwell is seeking a vote on an amendment she
co-sponsored with Senate Agriculture Committee Chairwoman Blanche
Lincoln (D-Ark.) that aims to toughen enforcement of complex financial
derivatives, said John Diamond, Cantwell spokesman.
Cantwell said that the measure is crucial to the reform effort.
"This one is so
critical to making sure there is clarity in the marketplace that I
couldn't move forward without a vote on it," she said.
The
Washington senator told reporters that the Democratic leadership did not
say why they did not call a vote on the amendment.
Cantwell is also co-sponsoring an amendment with Sen. John McCain
(R-Ariz.) that would reinstate the Glass-Steagall rules that separate
commercial and investment banking. The rules were repealed in 1999, an
event which has become a lightning rod for criticism of Wall Street.
The cloture
vote was held open for more than half an hour after it became clear that
Democrats did not have the votes to pass the measure, but Cantwell said
that was because of the absence of Sen. Mark Begich (D-Alaska), who was
attending to a family matter, and not vote-wrangling with her.
Sen.
Russ Feingold (Wis.) was the only other Democrat to vote against the
cloture motion.
Cross-posted to Blog Briefing Room
Silla Brush contributed to this post