Cloture rules are the Senate procedure (Rule XXII) that ends debate on a bill by a three-fifths vote, usually 60 senators, cutting off a filibuster so the chamber can move to a final vote. In AP Gov, cloture is the check on the Senate's tradition of unlimited debate (Topic 2.1).
Cloture is the Senate's only formal way to shut down debate. Because the Senate has just 100 members, its rules allow much looser, less formal debate than the 435-member House, and that includes the filibuster, where senators can talk (or simply threaten to talk) indefinitely to block a vote. Invoking cloture, which requires three-fifths of the Senate (60 votes), caps remaining debate and forces the bill toward a final vote.
Here's the part that makes cloture so powerful on the exam. Passing a bill only takes a simple majority (51 votes), but getting to that vote effectively takes 60. So the cloture threshold, not the majority vote, is often the real hurdle for major legislation. That's why you'll hear people say a bill "needs 60 votes in the Senate" even though the Constitution never says that anywhere. It's a Senate rule, not a constitutional requirement, which also means the Senate can change it (and has, for presidential nominations).
Cloture lives in Unit 2: Interactions Among Branches of Government, specifically Topic 2.1 (Congress), supporting learning objective 2.1.A, which asks you to describe the different structures, powers, and functions of each house of Congress. The CED's essential knowledge stresses that chamber size shapes debate, with the House running formal, tightly controlled debate while the Senate allows informal, extended debate. Cloture is your go-to concrete example of that contrast. The House doesn't need cloture because its Rules Committee already limits debate; the Senate needs it precisely because debate there has no built-in time limit. Knowing cloture lets you explain why the Senate is slower and more consensus-driven than the House, which is exactly the kind of structural comparison AP Gov MCQs and the Concept Application FRQ reward.
Keep studying AP Gov Unit 2
Filibuster (Unit 2)
Cloture and the filibuster are two halves of one mechanism. The filibuster is the delay tactic of unlimited debate, and cloture is the only tool that ends it. You can't fully explain one without the other.
Senate Majority Leader (Unit 2)
The majority leader decides what comes to the floor, but cloture limits that power. Even with a majority, the leader usually can't pass major bills without 60 votes to break a filibuster, which forces bipartisan dealmaking.
Advising and consenting (Unit 2)
Cloture rules used to apply to nominations too, but the Senate lowered that threshold to a simple majority (the "nuclear option"). That's why presidents can now confirm judges and Cabinet officials on party-line votes while legislation still faces the 60-vote wall.
Divided Government (Unit 4 connections to Unit 2)
Cloture amplifies gridlock. Even under unified government, a party without 60 Senate seats can see its agenda stall, so cloture helps explain why so few major bills become law in a polarized era.
Cloture shows up most often in multiple-choice questions about how the House and Senate differ, where it's the Senate-side answer paired against the House Rules Committee. A classic stem describes a bill stalled by extended Senate debate and asks what procedure moves it forward. On the Concept Application FRQ, you might get a scenario about a stalled bill or a nomination fight and need to explain how Senate rules affect the outcome. The move that earns points is precision. Say that cloture requires a three-fifths vote (60 senators) to end debate, and connect it to the consequence, which is that major legislation effectively needs a supermajority in the Senate even though final passage only needs 51 votes. No released FRQ has hinged on the word "cloture" by itself, but it's a standard supporting detail in answers about legislative gridlock and chamber differences.
They're opposites, and students mix them up constantly. The filibuster extends debate to block a vote; cloture ends debate to force a vote. Remember it this way. Filibuster is the wall, cloture is the wrecking ball, and the wrecking ball takes 60 votes to swing.
Cloture is the Senate procedure that ends debate on a bill, requiring a three-fifths vote, which is 60 of 100 senators.
Cloture exists because the Senate allows unlimited debate, while the House never needs it because its Rules Committee already sets time limits.
Because cloture takes 60 votes, major legislation effectively needs a supermajority in the Senate even though final passage only requires a simple majority.
The 60-vote threshold is a Senate rule, not a constitutional requirement, so the Senate has changed it before, lowering it to a simple majority for presidential nominations.
On the exam, cloture is your best concrete example for explaining why the Senate is slower and more consensus-driven than the House (LO 2.1.A).
Cloture rules are the Senate procedure for ending debate on a bill. It takes a three-fifths vote (60 senators) to invoke cloture, which cuts off a filibuster and lets the Senate move to a final vote. It's tested in Unit 2, Topic 2.1.
They work in opposite directions. A filibuster uses unlimited debate to block a vote, while cloture ends that debate with 60 votes so the vote can happen. The filibuster delays; cloture breaks the delay.
No. The House doesn't need cloture because its 435 members operate under formal rules, and the House Rules Committee sets debate limits on every bill before it reaches the floor. Cloture is a Senate-only procedure.
No, and this is a common misconception. The Constitution only requires a simple majority to pass a bill. The 60-vote cloture threshold comes from Senate Rule XXII, an internal chamber rule, which is why the Senate was able to drop it to a simple majority for nominations.
Because most major bills face a filibuster threat, supporters must first win a cloture vote of 60 before they can hold the actual passage vote of 51. The cloture vote, not final passage, is usually the real obstacle.