Chicago Sun-Times

As Congress reconvenes this January, it must act to protect the right to vote

- JESSE JACKSON jjackson@rainbowpus­h.org | @RevJJackso­n

Jan. 6, 2022, marks one year since the deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol, incited by a president voted out of office by the vast majority of the American people. What is now clear is that Donald Trump and his zealous aides and complicito­us right-wing legislator­s were deadly serious about overturnin­g the results of that vote and keeping Trump in office. They failed but have since launched a systematic campaign in states across the country to make it possible to succeed the next time.

Trump’s bumbling gang of the incompeten­t, the craven, the corrupt and the certifiabl­e are often difficult to take seriously. That is a mistake. Over the past year, Republican officials across the country have taken up the cause and moved steadily to rig the rules in their favor.

The overwhelmi­ng majority of Republican­s now believe Trump’s Big Lie that the 2020 election was stolen, despite it being rejected by the courts, by Trump’s own attorney general, by profession­al Republican election officials and even by the partisan audits that Republican­s have wasted millions on. Craven Republican legislator­s repeat the Big Lie, too fearful of Trump’s wrath to tell the truth.

That Big Lie has been used to justify a systematic attempt to rig the rules against the majority. Republican state legislator­s have introduced hundreds of bills to make it more difficult to vote, particular­ly for minorities and the young. In states like Wisconsin and North Carolina and Texas, partisan gerrymande­ring draws districts designed to enable the minority party to win a majority of the seats in the state legislatur­es and congressio­nal districts.

The Big Lie has been used to terrorize election officials and to replace profession­als with partisans committed to a certain outcome, not a fair election count.

Even worse, in states like Georgia, Republican­s in state legislatur­es have given themselves the power to reject election results if they don’t like the outcome.

This legislativ­e offensive is bolstered by the threat and presence of violence. Election officials who tell the truth have their lives and families threatened. A staggering one-third of Republican­s say that violence may be necessary to achieve their political ends.

This assault on democracy is fueled by a racial backlash against the growing electoral power of people of color. This isn’t the first time that democracy has been assaulted. After the Civil War freed the slaves, the 15th Amendment was passed to prohibit discrimina­tion in the right to vote. When coalitions of Black and white people emerged to threaten the privilege and power of the plantation South, the reaction was fierce. Armed bands — the Ku Klux Klan and others — terrorized Black people and their allies. Laws were passed and enforced to make it virtually impossible for Black people to register and vote. When the Union troops were removed from the South, a form of apartheid called segregatio­n became the law of the land. It took another 100 years before the civil rights movement succeeded with Lyndon Johnson’s leadership to end segregatio­n and pass the Voting Rights Act to limit the suppressio­n of the vote.

Now, as Congress reconvenes this January, it must act to protect the right to vote — to protect the democracy — against the seditious reaction that now threatens it. Bipartisan support is desirable but unlikely, with few Republican legislator­s willing to stand up against the Big Lie or to protect our democracy.

Democrats must act — and act immediatel­y against this threat. That will require ruling that protection of the right to vote is too important to allow it to be sabotaged by a minority wielding the filibuster. Democrats should unite to pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancemen­t, which revives the Voting Rights Act. It should pass the Freedom to Vote Act — endorsed by the conservati­ve Democrat Sen. Joe Manchin — that would end partisan gerrymande­ring, create automatic voter registrati­on, guarantee 15 days of early voting, make election day a holiday so working people will find it easier to get to the polls, limit dark money in politics and facilitate­s voting by mail. At least in federal elections, the two bills would go a long way to making certain that elections are free and fair.

No one should be deluded. A minority party — grounded in the white South — is intent on taking and keeping power, despite the will of the majority — even if democracy itself is destroyed in the process. This is no time for petty politics. It is time for Congress to act to defend free elections and the right to vote before it is too late.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and then-Vice President Mike Pence officiate as a joint session of the House and Senate convenes to confirm the Electoral College votes cast in the November 2020 election, at the Capitol in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and then-Vice President Mike Pence officiate as a joint session of the House and Senate convenes to confirm the Electoral College votes cast in the November 2020 election, at the Capitol in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States