Miami Herald

Biden signs order to expand voting access

An executive order from President Joe Biden directs federal agencies to take steps to promote voting access. The move, on the 56th anniversar­y of ‘Bloody Sunday’ in Selma, Ala., comes as Democrats in Congress seek a broad elections bill.

- BY FELICIA SONMEZ AND AMY GARDNER

President Biden on Sunday signed an executive order aimed at promoting voting rights amid a push by Republican-led state legislatur­es to roll back voting access in the wake of former president Donald Trump’s 2020 loss and his baseless effort to cast doubt on the integrity of U.S. elections.

The order comes on the 56th anniversar­y of “Bloody Sunday,” the day that state troopers violently beat hundreds of marchers, including John Lewis, the late civil rights icon who served as a Democratic congressma­n from Georgia, on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala.

“Today, on the anniversar­y of Bloody Sunday, I am signing an executive order to make it easier for eligible voters to register to vote and improve access to voting,” Biden said Sunday in a videotaped address to the Martin and Coretta Scott King Unity Breakfast. “Every eligible voter should be able to vote and have that vote counted. If you have the best ideas, you have nothing to hide. Let the people vote.”

The order directs federal agencies to develop a strategic plan for promoting voter registrati­on and participat­ion, including potentiall­y applying to be a state-designated voter registrati­on agency and providing recommenda­tions on leave for federal employees to vote or to serve as poll workers.

Some states have programs to automatica­lly register eligible Americans to vote, unless they opt out, when

they interact with state motor vehicle department­s as as well as agencies that administer federal programs such as military recruitmen­t, Medicaid and food stamps. Under the Trump administra­tion, however, some federal agencies refused to share the data that would allow states to automatica­lly register voters this way, citing concerns about the privacy of health data. Biden’s executive order instructs federal agencies to relax that policy.

The order also aims to expand access to voting among active-duty members of the military as well as all eligible federally incarcerat­ed people.

And it establishe­s a steering group on Native American voting rights tasked with producing recommenda­tions by next year on expanding voter outreach and turnout among Native American communitie­s.

Biden’s move comes days after the Housepasse­d expansive legislatio­n to create uniform national voting standards, overhaul campaign finance laws and outlaw partisan redistrict­ing. The measure, H.R. 1, largely mirrors a bill passed by the chamber two years ago. But it has faced fierce Republican attacks that threaten to stop it cold in the Senate.

The bill’s voting provisions would guarantee no-excuse mail voting and at least 15 days of early voting for federal elections; require states to use their government records to automatica­lly register citizens to vote; restore voting rights to felons who have completed their sentences; and mandate the use of paper ballots.

During his remarks at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference last month, Trump blasted H.R. 1, accusing Democrats of wanting to register all welfare recipients to vote.

No Republican­s voted for the bill in 2019 or last week, when it was approved 220 to 210.

John Ratcliffe, Trump’s former director of national intelligen­ce, quickly accused Biden and Democrats of “trying to fix a problem that didn’t exist.”

“For all the complaints that you heard about the election in 2020, the complaint that no one said was, ‘It was too difficult to vote,’’’ Ratcliffe said on Fox News Channel’s “Sunday Morning Futures.” “And yet, what [House Speaker] Nancy Pelosi and President Biden say is, ‘Well, we have got to remove obstacles from people voting,’ when, in fact, that really was not a problem.”

Dozens of Republican­controlled state legislatur­es, meanwhile, are considerin­g sweeping new laws that would restrict voting options ahead of the 2022 midterms. Some of the measures would restrict absentee balloting, while others would limit early voting and other aspects of election administra­tion.

One bill in Georgia would block early voting on Sundays, which critics consider a flagrant attempt to thwart Souls to the Polls, the Democratic turnout effort focused on Black churchgoer­s on the final Sunday before an election.

In his remarks Sunday, Biden noted that in 2020, even with the obstacles presented by the coronaviru­s pandemic, “more Americans voted than ever before.”But he alsowarned that the country is witnessing a “never-before-seen effort to ignore, undermine and undo the will of the people.” He cited both the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob as well as the 250 bills introduced by lawmakers in 43 states this legislativ­e session aimed at making it more difficult to vote.

“We cannot let them succeed,” he said.

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