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A filibuster is a debate that takes place within a governing group in which voting is delayed or prevented by one or more members of the group. To end a filibuster the Senate must conduct a vote on the matter. If there is three fifths of the members in favor of ending the filibuster this is carried out.
It would be Three-fifths of the Senate, or 60 members who vote against it.
In the United States Senate, the rule used to stop a filibuster is called "cloture." With the approval of three-fifths of the sitting Senators, this rule sets a limit on how long the Senate can continue to debate a bill or other proposal before voting on it.
A filibuster
In both the US Congress and the Texas Legislature, it's those bodies' rules which govern filibusters. In the US Congress, current rules allow a Senator to talk endlessly about a bill or until the Senate votes to invoke Cloture which takes at least 60 Senators voting for Cloture. Once Cloture is invoked, further debate on the bill by all Senators is limited to 30 hours. In the Texas Legislature, Senators can also talk endlessly on a bill, but they must remain at their desk, upright, and their words must be reasonably related to the bill. There is no Cloture. To end a filibuster, a majority of Senators must approve a point of order which is an allegation that the Senator who is filibustering violated a filibuster rule.
Filibuster
It is the Senate that does.
a filibuster?
None. The Senate must approve the nomination of a US Supreme Court justice by a simple majority vote (51% of those voting). If the nominee is filibustered, cloture (ending the filibuster) requires a three-fifths, or 60-member, vote. Under the old rules, two-thirds of those present had to vote in favor of ending a filibuster in order to take an up-or-down vote; however, this rule changed in 1975. Once the filibuster ends, approval still only requires a simple majority vote.
majority
By voting a bill down, using a filibuster (Senate Only), or killed by committee.
Filibuster.