Chattanooga Times Free Press

Democrats revise elections bill but face Senate headwinds

- BY BRIAN SLODYSKO

WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats unveiled a pared back elections bill Tuesday in hopes of kickstarti­ng their stalled push to counteract new laws in Republican states that could make it more difficult to cast a ballot.

But the new compromise legislatio­n is likely doomed to fail in the 50-50 Senate, facing the same lockstep Republican opposition that scuttled their previous attempts to pass an even more sweeping bill. The GOP blasted the earlier measure as “unnecessar­y” and a “partisan power grab.”

Republican-controlled legislatur­es have enacted restrictio­ns over the past year in the name of election security that will make it harder to vote and could make the administra­tion of the elections more subject to partisan interferen­ce. Texas, which already has some of the country’s strictest voting rules, recently adopted a law that will further limit the ability to cast a ballot, empower party poll watchers and create new criminal penalties for those who run afoul of the rules — even if inadverten­tly.

The spate of new voting laws — many inspired by former President Donald Trump’s false claims of a stolen election — have ratcheted up pressure on Democrats in Congress to pass legislatio­n that could counteract the GOP push. Trump’s claims of election fraud were widely rejected in the courts, by state officials who certified the results and by his own attorney general.

“We have seen unpreceden­ted attacks on our democracy in states across the country. These attacks demand an immediate federal response,” said Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., the lead sponsor of the new bill.

The revised legislatio­n was negotiated for weeks by a group of Democratic senators and includes many of the same provisions as the previous bill, known as the For the People Act.

It would establish national rules for running elections, limit partisansh­ip in the drawing of congressio­nal districts and force the disclosure of many anonymous donors who spend big to influence elections, according to a summary obtained by The Associated Press.

But it also includes a number of changes sought by West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, who is the chamber’s most conservati­ve Democrat. That includes provisions that would limit, but not prohibit, state voter ID requiremen­ts, as well as the eliminatio­n of a proposed overhaul of the Federal Election Commission, which was intended to alleviate partisan gridlock at the election watchdog agency.

The new measure also dumps language that would have created a public financing system for federal elections. It would instead establish a more limited financing system for House candidates that states could opt to participat­e in.

Other provisions are aimed at alleviatin­g concerns from local elections officials, who worried the original bill would have been too difficult to implement. And some new additions are aimed at insulating nonpartisa­n election officials, who may be subject to greater partisan pressure under some of the new state laws.

White House spokeswoma­n Karine JeanPierre said Tuesday that the administra­tion was “encouraged by the momentum” and said President Joe Biden would “continue to work with Congress” to pass the bill.

Yet despite the changes, Republican­s are expected to uniformly oppose the measure, which they say amounts to a federal takeover of elections. That leaves Democrats well short of the 60 votes needed to advance the bill unless they change the Senate’s filibuster rules, which Manchin and other moderates have ruled out.

Manchin has said Congress shouldn’t pass voting legislatio­n unless it is bipartisan. He has shopped the revised bill to some Republican senator in recent weeks, seeking their support. But there are no indication­s of any signing on.

Manchin told reporters Tuesday that the new bill “makes more sense, it’s more practical, more reasonable,” but said he “didn’t have anything to say” about making changes to the filibuster.

“Now we have to sit down and work with our Republican colleagues,” he said.

“I’m headed to do that right now,” Klobuchar said before walking on to the Senate floor.

But moments later, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell threw cold water on the bill, calling it “a solution in search of a problem” that “we will not be supporting.”

“Let me say for the umpteenth time,” the Kentucky Republican said. “There is no rational basis for the federal government taking over how we conduct elections.”

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