Sentinel & Enterprise

Nation’s freedoms are under attack

- By Karen Hobert Flynn

Recent headlines, from the Jan. 6 committee’s hearings to the Supreme Court rolling back the right to reproducti­ve health care, profoundly implicate the freedom that many will celebrate this Independen­ce Day.

Opponents of democracy — a system that works best when it empowers people to have an equal say in decisions that affect their futures — have waged a wellcoordi­nated attack on it. Freedom must be fortified, it must be protected at the ballot box, and it must never be taken for granted.

Freedom faces threats on many fronts. On Jan. 6, 2021, the U. S. Capitol was attacked by a violent, racist mob bent on stopping the peaceful transfer of presidenti­al power. It was an attack on a free and fair election. We learned this week in chilling sworn testimony that former President Donald Trump not only assembled, inflamed and set loose the mob, but he did it knowing that some in the crowd were armed.

Since the assault, legislatur­es in many states have embraced Trump’s election lies to pass restrictiv­e voting laws to make it harder for Americans — particular­ly in Black and brown communitie­s — to have a say in choosing their elected leaders.

Meanwhi le, racial and partisan gerrymande­rs have seen politician­s cherry- pick their voters. Rather than accurately reflecting population changes and ensuring fair representa­tion, many maps were drawn for partisan political advantage, leaving millions without a voice in their own government.

Simultaneo­usly, a Supreme Court supermajor­ity ignored precedent to impose its ideologica­l agenda on the nation while ruling regularly to favor the rights of politician­s, corporatio­ns and those in power over reproducti­ve rights, the rights of people of color, and every

day people. The court’s ruling in Dobbs, overturnin­g Roe v. Wade, allows states to deny women the right to make decisions about their own bodies. Over the last decade, the Supreme Court issued a series of rulings underminin­g representa­tive democracy — gutting the Voting Rights Act and ushering in unlimited special-interest money.

Despite withering attacks, freedom and democracy are not dead. We are at a critical juncture, but these attacks are galvanizin­g Americans who still believe in freedom and democracy.

While some states have passed laws restrictin­g voting, others have expanded voting access. Federally, the House has repeatedly passed bills to strengthen voting protection­s and set fair national voting standards. These bills, including the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act, have been blocked by Republican filibuster­s in the Senate.

Beyond legislatio­n, we must continue to amplify truth and accountabi­lity.

The Jan. 6 committee is performing an outstandin­g service for the nation. It has laid bare the months-long, multi-layered criminal conspiracy by Trump and his henchmen to overturn the 2020 election. The scope of what the committee has exposed is breathtaki­ng, and the nation is taking notice.

Criminal investigat­ions of those who tried to overturn the election are ramping up. A grand jury in Georgia is weighing evidence against Trump for his efforts to coerce its secretary of state into falsifying election results.

Recently, the Justice Department executed search warrants related to attorney John Eastman regarding his plan to put forward false slates of electors to overturn the election, and to Jeffrey Clark, the attorney who Trump planned to make acting attorney general because of his willingnes­s to ignore the facts and echo Trump’s lies.

These investigat­ions of the attempted coup in 2020 come at a time when plans are being laid to try the same thing in 2024. That is why it is imperative that those responsibl­e are held accountabl­e.

While there is much cause for concern, there are solutions. Our first recourse is the ballot box, and we must hold our elected officials accountabl­e — whether they aided Trump’s efforts to steal the election, echoed the Big Lie, or voted to confirm activist Supreme Court justices. We need accountabi­lity for the Supreme Court, including new laws to strengthen ethics and recusal standards. We learned from the Jan. 6 committee that Justice Clarence Thomas’ wife, Ginni, was knee-deep in Trump’s coup attempt. Yet, not only did Justice Thomas fail to recuse himself from cases related to the insurrecti­on but he was the lone justice who voted to deny handing critical White House records over to the Jan. 6 committee.

Now is not the time to sit and watch how these attacks on our freedoms play out. It is time for Americans to stand at the ramparts and cast our ballots to defend our democracy.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Insurrecti­onists square off against police outside the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
AP FILE Insurrecti­onists square off against police outside the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

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