Chattanooga Times Free Press

A POLITICIZE­D JUSTICE DEPARTMENT

- ANDREWS MCMEEL SYNDICATIO­N

The Democratic Party’s No. 1 priority is to pass a voting “reform” bill that would federalize elections under rules favorable to Democratic candidates. It’s more important than infrastruc­ture, or massive new social spending, or anything else.

The House passed H.R. 1 in a nearly straight party-line vote on March 3. Every single Republican voted against it, and every Democrat, with one exception (Rep. Bennie Thompson), voted for it. The problem for Democrats is that there is no chance S.1 will pass in the Senate, where Democrats do not hold a majority of seats. To pass S.1, Democrats would first have to eliminate the filibuster, and then muster all of their 50 senators to vote for the bill against 50 Republican­s, and then call in Vice President Kamala Harris to break the tie. The short version: not gonna happen.

That is where Attorney General Merrick Garland comes in. On June

11, Garland gathered the employees of the Justice Department to deliver a speech promising that the department will intervene in election procedures around the country, to do at least some of the work that Democrats are failing to accomplish on Capitol Hill.

Garland announced that in the next 30 days, he will “double the [Civil Rights Division’s] enforcemen­t staff for protecting the right to vote.” The need for action is great, he explained, because Congress has not yet acted on S.1 and another Democratic voting measure, the John Lewis Voting Rights

Act. “We need Congress to pass S.1 and the John Lewis Voting Rights Act,” Garland said. “We will work with Congress to provide all necessary support as it considers federal legislatio­n to protect voting rights.”

Then Garland continued: “We will not wait for that legislatio­n to act.”

Garland talked about the history of the Justice Department’s actions concerning voting, from Reconstruc­tion through Jim Crow through the civil rights movement and years of Voting Rights Act enforcemen­t. His premise — entirely without basis — was that voting rights are under attack today in a manner reminiscen­t of the 1950s or 1960s. “There has been a dramatic rise in legislativ­e efforts that will make it harder for millions of citizens to cast a vote that counts,” Garland said.

Garland’s speech was a collection of left-wing talking points, decrying new state laws and “abnormal post-election audit methodolog­ies” in the wake of the 2020 election.

In light of the stalled Democratic effort to pass S.1, Garland is beefing up the Civil Rights Division enforcemen­t staff to file questionab­le lawsuits in an effort to infringe on the states’ constituti­onal authority to run their own elections. On June 25, the department did just that, filing suit against Georgia to overturn the new voting procedure law. The lawsuit was an “obviously political stunt,” wrote National Review’s Dan McLaughlin, and “reads more like an op-ed in Mother Jones than a legal case.” Indeed, the lawsuit, and Garland’s speech, are somewhat more refined and generalize­d versions of President Biden’s irresponsi­ble declaratio­n that the Georgia voting law was “Jim Crow on steroids.”

“I think Garland will use the added staff to attack state election reform bills under the Voting Rights Act, claiming they are discrimina­tory,” said Hans von Spakovsky, head of the Election Law Reform Initiative at the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation and a former Federal Election Commission member and Justice Department official.

“Liberal advocacy groups have already filed numerous such lawsuits against these new laws,” von Spakovsky continued, “and Garland no doubt wants to add the heft of the Justice Department to these lawsuits to try to get these state laws knocked out by a friendly, liberal federal judge.”

It’s just part of the politiciza­tion of the department under President Biden, involving some of the same Democrats who accused the Trump administra­tion of politicizi­ng the department. And one final note: At his confirmati­on hearing in February, Garland promised to “protect the independen­ce of the department from partisan influence in law enforcemen­t.”

 ??  ?? Byron York
Byron York

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States