The Pak Banker

Marchers across US call on Congress to bolster voting rights

-

Thousands of voting rights advocates rallied across the country to call for sweeping federal laws that would wipe out voting restrictio­ns advancing in some Republican-controlled states that could make it harder to cast a ballot.

Many activists view the fight over voting rules as the civil rights issue of the era. But frustratio­ns have mounted for months because two expansive election bills have stalled in the U.S. Senate, which is split evenly between Democrats and Republican­s and the measures lack the votes to overcome a GOP blockade.

The rallies, which were held in dozens of cities, were intended to increase pressure on Democrats to rewrite procedural rules that would allow Democrats to muscle the legislatio­n through without Republican votes. But they were also aimed at coaxing President Joe Biden to become a more forceful advocate on the issue.

"You said the night you won that Black America had your back, and that you were going to have Black Americans' backs," the Rev. Al Sharpton, who helped organize the national demonstrat­ions, said at a rally in Washington. "Well, Mr. President, they're stabbing us in the back."

More than a thousand people turned out in sweltering heat on the National Mall on Saturday, the 58th anniversar­y of Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech. His son Martin Luther King III used the occasion to call on the Senate to scrap the filibuster rule, which requires 60 votes for most legislatio­n, including the voting bills, to advance.

"Our country is backslidin­g to the unconscion­able days of Jim Crow. And some of our senators are saying, 'Well, we can't overcome the filibuster,'" King told the crowd.

"I say to you today: Get rid of the filibuster. That is a monument to white supremacy we must tear down."

At one point, nearly a dozen state lawmakers from Texas who had sought to block changes to their state's elections laws, strolled onto the stage at the National Mall and were hailed as patriots.

"Texas is the worst state to vote in, in the entire nation," said U.S. Rep.

Sheila Jackson Lee, a Democrat from Houston. Even as rally participan­ts pushed for stronger protection­s, Republican lawmakers in Texas were on the brink of passing an overhaul of its voting laws, including restrictio­ns on voting by mail, limits on when voters can cast ballots and other measures that Republican­s say would improve the integrity of its elections.

Texas would be the latest state to pass new laws, following moves in other Republican-controlled states like Arizona, Florida and Georgia to put in place similar restrictio­ns - efforts driven by former President Donald Trump's false claims that the 2020 election was stolen.

Congressio­nal Democrats have responded to the Republican efforts to make it harder to vote by approving legislatio­n earlier this week that would restore sections of the landmark Voting Rights Act of 1965. The bill would require the Justice Department to once again police changes to voting laws in states with a history of restrictin­g the vote, a practice that was put on hold by the Supreme Court in 2013.

But unless Democrats make changes to the Senate procedural rules, passage of the bill, as well as a separate measure that would establish national election standards, remains unlikely.

In a video posted on Twitter earlier in the day, Vice President Kamala Harris urged Congress to pass legislatio­n that she said was needed to push back against Republican­s in Texas, Florida and other states. "The country is changing. The demographi­cs are changing. And (Republican­s) think that if they don't get ahead of it and suppress the vote, they ain't gonna have a say in it," said Ken Jones, 72, of Atlanta, who traveled to Washington with his wife, Paula, to attend the rally.

Angela Hill, 61, who lives in the Washington area, attended the rally with her daughter because she is "alarmed" by Republican efforts to make it harder to vote. In spite of Trump's false claims of a stolen victory, Republican and Democratic election officials across the country certified the outcome and Trump's own attorney general said he saw no evidence of widespread voter fraud.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan