The Guardian Australia

Democracy under attack: how Republican­s led the effort to make it harder to vote

- Sam Levine in New York

2021 was the year that America’s democracy came under attack from within.

Donald Trump’s effort to overturn the election results, a push that culminated in the 6 January assault on the capitol, ultimately failed. But the lies the former president spread about fraud and the integrity of the 2020 results have stuck around in a dangerous way. False claims about the election have moved to the center of the Republican party.

Republican lawmakers have seized on the fears created by those baseless claims and weaponized them into new laws that make it harder to vote. Between January and October, 19 states enacted 33 laws to restrict voting access, according to the Brennan Center for Justice.

But Republican­s haven’t stopped there. There is now a concerted effort to take more partisan control of election administra­tion. Trump is supporting election deniers in their efforts to take control of key offices that control the rules of elections and counting of ballots. That push has elevated fears that Trump is laying the groundwork for another coup in 2024, when supporters in those key roles could help overturn the election results.

All of these actions are taking place against the backdrop of the onceper-decade redistrict­ing process, which Republican­s dominate in many states. Republican­s are taking full advantage of that power, drawing districts that will entrench their control of state legislatur­es and win congressio­nal seats for the next decade.

Joe Biden has described this attack as “the most significan­t test of our democracy since the civil war.” But Democrats in the US Senate have been unable to pass two bills with significan­t voting rights protection­s. Whether or not Biden and Senate Democrats can find a way to get those bills through Congress looms as a major test of his presidency.

Here are the ways that voting rights emerged as the most important story in American politics in 2021:

New voting restrictio­ns

When state legislatur­es convened at the start of 2021, many moved quickly to enact new laws making it harder to cast a ballot. Many of these new measures targeted voting by mail, which a record number of Americans used in 2020.

One of the most high profile battles was in Georgia, a state Trump targeted with baseless claims of fraud after a surprising loss to Biden there. Republican­s enacted a law that requires voters to provide additional identifica­tion informatio­n on both absentee ballot request forms and the ballot itself. They also restricted the availabili­ty of absentee ballot drop boxes, a popular method of returning ballots in 2020. The law also criminaliz­ed providing food and water to people standing in line within 150ft of a polling place.

In Florida, Republican­s enacted a new law that also restricts the availabili­ty of ballot drop boxes, imposes new rules around third-party registrati­on groups, and makes it so voters have to more frequently request absentee ballots.

The fight over new voting restrictio­ns exploded in July, when Democrats in the Texas legislatur­e fled the state for several weeks, denying Republican­s the quorum they needed to pass new voting restrictio­ns. Republican­s eventually succeeded in passing a law that banned 24-hour voting, establishe­d regular citizenshi­p checks for voter rolls, made it harder to assist voters , and empowered partisan poll watchers at the polls.

Underminin­g confidence in elections

A staggering number of Americans continue not to believe the results of the 2020 election. A September CNN poll found 36% of Americans do not believe Biden was the legitimate winner of the election.

Trump has fueled that disbelief by continuing to make claims of irregulari­ties that have already been debunked. Republican­s in several states continue to call for the “decertific­ation” of elections, something that is legally impossible.

Republican­s in some places have gone even further, authorizin­g unusual post-election inquiries into election results.

The most high-profile of those reviews was in Arizona, where Republican­s hired a firm with no election experience, called Cyber Ninjas, to examine all 2.1m votes cast in Maricopa county, the most populous in the state. That monthslong effort, which included a hand count of every single ballot, was widely criticized by election experts, who noted that the firm had shoddy methodolog­y and its leader had embraced conspiracy theories about the election. Ultimately, the Cyber Ninjas effort affirmed Biden’s win in Maricopa county.

Republican­s elsewhere have embraced similar reviews. In Wisconsin, Republican­s in the legislatur­e have hired a former Republican supreme court justice to examine the election, but that effort has been marked by sloppiness and accusation­s of partisan bias.

“This is a grift, to be clear,” Matt Masterson, a former top official at the Department of Homeland Security, who closely works on election administra­tion, said in December.

These efforts have been coupled with an even more alarming effort in Republican legislatur­es to empower lawmakers to alter election results. Lawmakers in seven states, including Michigan, Arizona, Missouri and Nevada, introduced 10 bills this year that would empower them to override or change election results, according to the Brennan Center for Justice. Some of the bills would allow partisan lawmakers to outright reject election results, while others would allow for post-election meddling in the vote count.

Attacks on election officials

Over the last year, there’s been a surge in election administra­tors who have left their positions because of threats and harassment. Experts are deeply concerned about that exodus and say that it could make room for more inexperien­ced, partisan workers to take over the running of elections. Ben Ginsberg, a longtime Republican election lawyer, said earlier this month the effort was an attempt to take election administra­tion “from the pros” and give it “to the pols”.

Trump has also endorsed several candidates who have embraced the myth of a stolen election to be the secretary of state, the chief election official, in many states. So far, he’s made endorsemen­ts in GOP primaries in Michigan, Arizona, Georgia, and Nevada – all key swing states that could play a determinat­ive role in 2024.

Extreme partisan gerrymande­ring

At the start of each decade, state lawmakers across the US draw new congressio­nal and state legislativ­e districts. In 2020, Republican­s dominated the down-ballot races that determine who gets to control the redistrict­ing process. And this year, they’ve used their power remarkably powerfully.

In Texas, where 95% of the state’s population growth was from non-white people, Republican­s drew maps blunting the political power of minorities. They drew no new majority-minority districts, instead giving Republican­s an advantage at winning the state’s two new congressio­nal seats. Republican­s have also moved to shore up their advantage in politicall­y competitiv­e states like North Carolina, Ohio, and Georgia. Democrats are gerrymande­ring the states where they have power, like Illinois and Maryland, but control the redistrict­ing process in far fewer places than Republican­s do.

These rigged districts will insulate Republican­s from threats to their political power for the next decade.

Federal voting rights legislatio­n

One of the biggest frustratio­ns of the first year of Biden’s presidency has been that Democrats have not been able to pass two key pieces of voting rights legislatio­n through Congress. One bill would set a minimum of access across the country, guaranteei­ng things like 15 days of early voting, as well as prohibitin­g partisan gerrymande­ring. The second bill would re-establish a critical piece of the 1965 Voting Rights Act requiring states where there is repeated evidence of voting discrimina­tion to get voting changes approved by the federal government before they go into effect.

There is growing frustratio­n that Biden has not pushed hard enough to get rid of the filibuster, which Republican­s have relied on to stall those bills. Democrats have pledged to find a way around the filibuster next year.

 ?? Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images ?? Trump supporters on 6 January. Between January and October, 19 states enacted 33 laws to restrict voting access, according to the Brennan Center for Justice.
Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images Trump supporters on 6 January. Between January and October, 19 states enacted 33 laws to restrict voting access, according to the Brennan Center for Justice.

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