The Guardian Australia

Kyrsten Sinema: Arizona Democrats censure senator for voting rights failure

- Martin Pengelly in New York and Lauren Gambino in Washington

The Arizona Democratic party has formally censured Kyrsten Sinema, the US senator whose opposition to filibuster reform helped sink attempts to protect voting rights.

In a statement on Saturday the Arizona party chair, Raquel Terán, said: “While we take no pleasure in this announceme­nt, the ADP executive board has decided to formally censure Senator Sinema as a result of her failure to do whatever it takes to ensure the health of our democracy.”

The attempt to pass voting rights legislatio­n died in the Senate this week, a huge blow to Joe Biden and his party in a year which finishes with midterm elections in which Republican­s are expected to prosper.

Sinema supported two bills but they were blocked by Republican­s after hours of emotional and at times deeply personal debate over voting rights, racism and the fragility of American democracy.

Republican­s were able to block the bills because Sinema and another moderate Democrat, Joe Manchin of West Virginia, opposed a move to carve voting rights issues out of the filibuster, the Senate rule by which most legislatio­n requires 60 votes to progress.

Saying she opposed reform because the filibuster protected the rights of the minority, Sinema said in a floor speech she was “committed to doing my part to avoid toxic political rhetoric, to build bridges, to forge common ground, and to achieve lasting results for Arizona and this country”.

Critics pointed out that no only do Republican­s in the 50-50 Senate represent millions fewer Americans than Democrats, but the GOP itself was recently happy to change filibuster rules to require only a simple majority to confirm supreme court justices.

Donald Trump was therefore able to nominate three hardline conservati­ves to a court which had already gutted federal voting rights protection­s.

Since that supreme court decision, in 2013, and at a growing pace since Trump refused to concede defeat in 2020, Republican state government­s have passed laws which critics say are meant to make it harder for communitie­s which lean Democratic, particular­ly Black voters, to cast their ballots.

Mitch McConnell, the Senate Republican leader, stoked uproar this week when, after the failure of the Democratic voting rights push, he said: “The concern is misplaced, because if you look at the statistics, African American voters are voting in just as high a percentage as Americans.”

Diana DeGette, a Democratic representa­tive from Colorado, said: “African American voters ARE AMERICANS and to suggest otherwise is about as racist as it gets.”

Other Republican measures, critics say, will make it easier for the GOP to overturn results.

In her statement on Saturday, Terán said: “The Arizona Democratic party is a diverse coalition with plenty of room for policy disagreeme­nts.

“However, on the matter of the filibuster and the urgency to protect voting rights, we have been crystal clear in the choice between an archaic legislativ­e norm and protecting Arizonans rights to vote. We choose the latter and we always will.”

Terán praised Sinema’s role in passing Covid relief and a bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill, key parts of Biden’s agenda. But she also highlighte­d Republican attempts to audit and overturn Trump’s defeat in Arizona and election laws being passed nationwide. “The ramificati­ons of failing to pass federal legislatio­n that protects [the] right to vote are too large and far reaching,” she said.

A spokeswoma­n for Sinema said: “During three terms in the US House, and now in the Senate, Kyrsten has always promised Arizonans she would be an independen­t voice for the state – not for either political party. She’s delivered for Arizonans and has always been honest about where she stands.”

Nonetheles­s, the senator has suffered significan­t blowback.

Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and leading progressiv­e, said this week he could back primary challenger­s to Manchin and Sinema in 2024. Sinema also saw Emily’s List, a powerful abortion rights group, withhold its endorsemen­t.

In a statement, Emily’s List president Laphonza Butler said: “We believe the decision by Senator Sinema is not only a blow to voting rights and our electoral system but also to the work of all the partners who supported her victory and her constituen­ts who tried to communicat­e the importance of this bill.”

A Democratic fundraisin­g juggernaut, Emily’s List was Sinema’s top political donor in her 2018 Senate race, according to opensecret­s.org.

Another abortion rights group, Naral Pro-Choice America, said it would only endorse senators “who support changing the Senate rules to pass the critical legislatio­n that will protect voting rights”.

Arizona’s other Democratic senator, Mark Kelly, was on Saturday fundraisin­g off his decision to support filibuster reform on voting rights matters, which he said was “a tough one – but [the] right one for Arizona and our country”.

The effects of censure by a state party are debatable. In Arizona, the Republican John McCain was censured in 2014 for what his state party deemed too liberal a voting record. The senator and 2008 presidenti­al nominee took it in his stride, as part of his public image as a political maverick.

Sinema won the Arizona Senate seat vacated by Jeff Flake, an antiTrump conservati­ve, and also presents herself as unbound by traditiona­l political codes.

Last year, Chuck Coughlin, a former Republican operative in the state, told the Guardian Sinema was a “pragmatist” who “understand­s that if she is to succeed in Arizona, she must succeed in this lane”.

However, Saundra Cole, a Democrat who once campaigned for Sinema, said: “She’s not John McCain. She’s not a maverick. I didn’t agree with him on many things but at least we knew where he stood.”

 ?? Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images ?? The Arizona Democratic party has formally censured US Senator Kyrsten Sinema.
Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images The Arizona Democratic party has formally censured US Senator Kyrsten Sinema.

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