East Bay Times

Now is the time for some suppressio­n of politician­s

- By Leonard Pitts Jr. Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald. ©2021 Miami Herald. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

On the issue of guns, John Kavanagh has a record unblemishe­d by sanity.

Indeed, a scroll through Vote Smart, the nonpartisa­n, nonprofit voter informatio­n clearingho­use, suggests the Arizona state lawmaker has never met a pro-gun measure he didn’t like. That includes bills authorizin­g concealed carry in public buildings, firearms sales without background checks and even one prohibitin­g the state from keeping records on gun owners.

So, yes, the man loves guns. The man thinks everybody should have access to guns.

But he doesn’t think everybody should vote.

Your modern Republican, you see, considers ballots more dangerous than bullets. “There’s a fundamenta­l difference between Democrats and Republican­s,” Kavanagh told CNN last week. “Democrats value as many people as possible voting, and they’re willing to risk fraud. Republican­s are more concerned about fraud, so we don’t mind putting security measures in that won’t let everybody vote — but everybody shouldn’t be voting.”

You may read that over again if you wish, but it won’t become less ugly. And if you’re unclear on who the “everybody” is that shouldn’t be voting, well ... welcome to America. Hope you enjoy your visit. If you get down to Miami, be sure to try the stone crabs.

The rest of us are confronted with a party made so desperate by its dwindling prospects of winning free and fair elections that it acts with increasing boldness to make them unfree and unfair. We keep seeing Republican­s do as Kavanagh did, i.e., give the game away, accidental­ly tell the truth of their alleged concern about so-called voter fraud that they know does not exist. In fact, just days before Kavanagh’s bout of rhetorical diarrhea, former senatorial candidate Lauren Witzke warned that, without passage of voter-suppressio­n bills, “We will never win again.”

Well, you know what?

It is time to give her — to give Kavanagh, to give all of them — exactly what they fear. Make it impossible for them to ever win again by spouting hateful extremism and cockamamie conspiraci­es. Make it impossible for them to ever win again by racing to the bottom on a toxic sludge of fear mongering, finger pointing and lies. Make it impossible for them to ever win again by gerrymande­ring. Make it impossible for them to ever win again without crafting thoughtful positions and intelligen­t policies with broad appeal.

To do that, Democrats and everyone else who believes in the will of the people must demand passage of the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancemen­t Act and the For the People Act, now making their way through Congress. And they must get a move on, because Republican­s are legislatin­g too, introducin­g over 250 state laws designed to restrict “everybody” from voting.

It is a startling fact, but a fact neverthele­ss, that we are living through the only time this country has ever tried democracy — one person, one vote. Which is to say, the 56 years since the Voting Rights Act was signed. Now, one party has decided democracy isn’t to its taste and is working to get rid of it.

But what we need to get rid of is “leaders” who do not venerate America’s core mission, its truths held self-evident. Our civic life must be scrubbed clean of crackpots, scoundrels and dullards who drag our most sacred values through the muck.

So forget voter suppressio­n. It’s time for some politician suppressio­n. In America, you see, everybody should have the right to vote, period. But there is one thing not everybody should have the privilege to do.

And that’s lead.

 ?? MELANIE MASON LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Republican Rep. John Kavanagh, chair of the Government and Elections Committee in the Arizona House, says, “we don’t mind putting security measures in that won’t let everybody vote.”
MELANIE MASON LOS ANGELES TIMES Republican Rep. John Kavanagh, chair of the Government and Elections Committee in the Arizona House, says, “we don’t mind putting security measures in that won’t let everybody vote.”

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