Baltimore Sun

It’s time for Senate to pass the ‘For the People Act’

- By Ben Jealous unlikely not

In his first news conference since being elected, President Joe Biden had strong words for the voter-suppressio­n bills sweeping through state legislatur­es, calling them “sick” and “pernicious.” He was right, but he also knows strong words won’t be enough. So the White House is supporting federal legislatio­n to stem this tide: the For the People Act, which has passed the House — led by Maryland Rep. John Sarbanes — but is unfortunat­ely becoming a political football in the Senate.

Critics are seemingly so afraid of this bill that their allegation­s against it have run off the rails into outlandish territory: An invitation to rampant voter fraud! People voting from prison! Sixteen-yearolds casting ballots! Taxpayers forced to fund political candidates they despise!

None of this true, so the real question is: What are the critics so afraid of and why? It must be the specter of more women, more shift workers, more Black and brown Americans, more young people and more people with disabiliti­es voting and running for office. Because that is exactly what the act will do. And it will accomplish this by doing two things — reducing the overwhelmi­ng influence of big money and wealthy corporatio­ns on our politics, and combating voter suppressio­n while expanding access to the ballot.

These things are intimately connected. Deep-pocketed corporate interests have always been invested in denying the ballot to working people, people of color and people who are likely to favor reasonable business regulation­s but to favor anti-worker, anti-environmen­t, anti-consumer corporate agendas. Big corporatio­ns and the wealthy have a similar interest in keeping such people from running for office, and in our post-Citizens United world, their control of the arena of campaign finance has been strengthen­ed. According to an analysis done by the Brennan Center, in 2016 just 400 political donors gave a combined $1.5 billion — more than five million small donors combined.

The For the People Act would shake up that status quo. It would create a small-donor matching system for campaigns, using money paid in fines by corporatio­ns that have broken the law —

taxpayer money, as critics claim. This makes small donors more influentia­l, and it makes non-rich candidates more viable. Right now, if you’re not a billionair­e or someone who wants to do the bidding of billionair­es and big corporatio­ns, your options for financing a competitiv­e campaign are limited; this bill would change that.

It would also take direct aim at the voter suppressio­n the president rightly calls “sick,” tactics including discrimina­tory voter ID laws, drastic voter roll purges, and harsh reductions in early and absentee voting. These restrictio­ns, the worst since the Jim Crow era, all hit working people and people of color especially hard. Instead of voter suppressio­n, under this new act we would have voter support: automatic voter registrati­on, online registrati­on, restoratio­n of voting rights to returning citizens, and protection for early and absentee voting. There would be a pilot program allowing people with disabiliti­es to register and vote from home. The timing couldn’t be more critical: the Brennan Center has tracked more than 250 voter-suppressio­n bills in more than 40 state legislatur­es this season alone.

And that’s why it was also encouragin­g to hear the president say in his news conference that he not only supports the For the People Act, he supports reforming the legislativ­e filibuster — and is willing to “go beyond” mere reform if the filibuster becomes a complete barrier to important bills like this one. In recent weeks it has become painfully obvious that the For the People Act, and much of the rest of the Biden legislativ­e agenda, could be DOA in the Senate unless the now-antiquated filibuster goes the way of spittoons in the chamber. Holdouts against this position are becoming fewer and fewer.

This is truly a historic moment in our country’s history, with a historic set of challenges. Passing the For the People Act is a step that will give more Americans more opportunit­y to participat­e in our democracy. It will lead to a domino effect with rapid progress on the issues we care about most, like climate change, expanding affordable health care, protecting workers’ rights and more. It’s time to end the fearmonger­ing and misinforma­tion about this bill. It’s time for the Senate to pass the For the People Act.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., addresses reporters on the For the People Act of 2021 on March 3 at the U.S. Capitol.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., addresses reporters on the For the People Act of 2021 on March 3 at the U.S. Capitol.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States