Las Vegas Review-Journal

President must press Congress to protect Americans’ right to vote

Republican insistence on suppressin­g the vote makes it vital that Congress approve the key provisions of the For the People Act already passed by the House.

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By staging a dramatic walkout Sunday, Democrats in the Texas House of Representa­tives prevented passage of a Republican bill that would make it harder for Texans, particular­ly citizens of color, to vote. But the victory was probably only temporary. At some point Texas is likely to follow the lead of Georgia and Florida, where Republican­s have moved to make exercising the franchise more difficult.

Like legislatio­n in other states, the Texas bill would rein in voting by mail, but it also targets turnout-enhancing practices that are especially important to voters of color, including 24-hour voting, drive-thru voting and early voting on Sunday.

One of the Republican sponsors of the bill said the legislatio­n “isn’t about who won or who lost” but is designed to “make the elections more accessible and more secure.” But it’s impossible to separate this and other “election integrity” bills pushed by Republican­s from the ongoing effort to delegitimi­ze President Joe Biden’s victory over Donald Trump.

Defenders of restrictiv­e legislatio­n argue that even if there was no significan­t fraud in 2020, many voters think there was and need to be reassured. But many of those concerns are the direct result of Republican acquiescen­ce in Trump’s Big Lie that the election was stolen from him.

Republican insistence on suppressin­g the vote makes it vital that Congress approve the key provisions of the For the People Act already passed by the House — including requiremen­ts that states allow wide use of mail-in ballots and provide a minimum number of days for early voting — as well as the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancemen­t Act.

The latter legislatio­n would reinvigora­te a requiremen­t in the 1965 Voting Rights Act that states with a history of racial discrimina­tion get advance approval from the Justice Department or a federal court for changes in election practices. (Before a 2013 Supreme Court decision gutting this provision, Texas was subject to this requiremen­t.)

Biden criticized the Texas legislatio­n and rightly called it part of an “assault on democracy.” He also urged passage of the For the People Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancemen­t Act. In a speech Tuesday in Tulsa, Okla., he promised to fight for voting rights legislatio­n and announced that Vice President Kamala Harris would help lead that effort.

For that effort to succeed, Biden must recognize that protecting voting rights will probably require abolishing or suspending the filibuster, which he has acknowledg­ed has been “abused in a gigantic way.” Then he needs to drive that reality home to Sens. Joe Manchin, D-W.VA., and Kyrsten Sinema, D-ariz.

Biden is known to be sentimenta­l about the traditions of a body in which he served for 36 years. But no Senate tradition, however entrenched, should stand in the way of guaranteei­ng equal access to the ballot box.

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