Daily Camera (Boulder)

Congress and Biden have stalled on voting rights

- By Bryan Lowry Mcclatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden and congressio­nal Democrats have vowed to pass federal voting rights legislatio­n, but eight months into his term they are losing a race with Republican-led state legislatur­es.

Eighteen states — 17 with legislatur­es under GOP control — have enacted new restrictio­ns on voting with many of the laws tightening rules around mail ballots, which were used widely during the 2020 election, according to New York University’s Brennan Center for Justice.

“Certainly the efforts to make it harder to vote have been turbocharg­ed this year. We are seeing truly unpreceden­ted levels of new laws that make it harder to vote,” said Eliza Sweren-becker, counsel for the democracy program at the Brennan Center. “It’s not too late for Congress to pass legislatio­n.”

Biden was a member of the Senate when it unanimousl­y extended the Voting Rights Act in 2006, but 15 years later the issue has transforme­d from a broad bipartisan consensus to one of the most contentiou­s and politicall­y polarized debates in Congress.

State laws are being passed amid federal inaction despite Biden and administra­tion officials repeatedly asserting their commitment to voting rights as a priority. Republican governors and state legislator­s have led the moves toward greater restrictio­ns.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott this week signed a sweeping new law that restricts local officials from sending voters unsolicite­d mail-in ballot applicatio­ns. The new law also bans 24-hour voting and drive-thru voting, two measures used last year by populous Harris County to help with social distancing during the pandemic.

Abbott, a two-term Republican, touted the legislatio­n as “making it harder to cheat,” but election experts have repeatedly refuted the notion of widespread voter fraud and say these new laws indulge already debunked conspiracy theories about the 2020 election.

“Almost all of these state laws are based on an alternate reality that doesn’t exist. It is objectivel­y true that the 2020 election was the most secure and transparen­t election we ever held,” said David Becker, founder and executive director of the Center for Election Innovation and Research.

“The Texas law might be the worst among the laws that have passed recently,” said Becker, who was previously a senior trial attorney in the Justice Department’s civil rights division under former Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.

Becker’s biggest concern with the Texas law is a provision that empowers partisan poll watchers and prevents poll workers from restrictin­g their movement at voting locations, a measure voting rights advocates warn could lead to voter intimidati­on.

The surge of state restrictio­ns has put pressure on Biden and Congress to act.

“The president has given several speeches on voting rights. He’s talked about how this is a cause of his presidency,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said on Tuesday in response to a question about frustratio­n among voting rights advocates that the president hasn’t done enough to advance the cause.

Psaki pointed to the Department of Justice doubling the staff dedicated to voting rights enforcemen­t as a way the administra­tion was addressing the issue beyond the bully pulpit.

The Texas law has already spurred multiple lawsuits seeking to overturn it, but voting rights advocates say U.S. Supreme Court decisions may make it difficult to prevail in court against state restrictio­ns without new fe deral legislatio­n.

Senate Rules Committee Chairwoman Amy Klobuchar, D-minn., called the Texas law and similar proposals “a coordinate­d effort to limit the freedom to vote, and an effort that demands a federal response.”

Asked about a potential congressio­nal response, Abbott’s spokeswoma­n Renae Eze said in an email that Texas’ new rules “will solidify trust and confidence in the outcome of our elections.”

The Senate is scheduled to consider this month the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancemen­t Act, a bill which seeks to give the Justice Department and civil rights organizati­ons more tools to challenge state restrictio­ns. The bill would apply retroactiv­ely to laws passed since January of this year.

Named for the civil rights icon and Georgia congressma­n who sponsored an earlier version, the legislatio­n responds to a 2013 U.S. Supreme Court decision that struck down a requiremen­t that states with histories of voter discrimina­tion obtain preclearan­ce from the Justice Department before enacting new election laws.

The legislatio­n sets a new formula for preclearan­ce, an option given to Congress in the 2013 ruling.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States