Los Angeles Times

I helped raise money for Sinema. She needs to change the filibuster

- Irwin M. Rappaport, Los Angeles

Re “Voting rights showdown looms in Senate,” Jan. 13

Dear Sen. Kyrsten Sinema: As you may recall, I hosted a fundraisin­g event for you in 2012 at my house in the Hollywood Hills when you were running for your first term in the House of Representa­tives. I was impressed by your firebrand personalit­y, your family’s history of struggle, your courage to run as an openly bisexual candidate in Arizona, and your commitment to the underprivi­leged and those outside the corridors of power.

Now that you’re a U.S. senator, I know you have a wider, very different constituen­cy. I respect the strategy behind your moving to the political center, of creating leverage for yourself by holding your cards close to your chest.

You have said you want to preserve the Senate filibuster so that rule changes don’t eliminate the minority party’s ability to influence legislatio­n. You want to preserve the possibilit­y of bipartisan­ship in legislatin­g. I get that as a general principle.

However, when it comes to protecting the right to vote and the sanctity of our election process, there is so much at stake that I’m afraid your protection of the filibuster is akin to winning the battle but losing the war. If Republican­s are allowed to repress voter registrati­on and participat­ion, subvert the vote counting and certificat­ion process, and basically steal future elections regardless of the will of the voters, then American democracy will have failed. This failure will trigger catastroph­ic consequenc­es for our economy, for our standing in the world, for our ability to attract investment and the best minds, for the world balance of power, and for Americans who are not wealthy, powerful or in the cultural and social mainstream — the people you so wanted to serve when you attended the fundraiser in my home nearly 10 years ago.

The values that you proclaimed to stand for when running for the House in 2012, and the bipartisan­ship for which you advocate now, will not be protected by a Republican president or Republican Congress in their current far-right orientatio­n. They couldn’t care less about bipartisan­ship. Imagine the consequenc­es for reproducti­ve rights, LGBTQ rights, people of color and the already uphill battle against climate change.

If Republican­s gain control of Congress, they will not hesitate to change the filibuster, any more than they have hesitated in other areas to do whatever they feel is expedient to increase their power.

You and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) can be credited with saving American democracy, or be remembered as the senators who saved the filibuster in the name of theoretica­l bipartisan­ship but allowed Republican­s to steal elections. Please, save our democracy and your place in history by changing your position on the filibuster as it relates to voting rights and elections.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? SEN. KYRSTEN SINEMA, seen leaving the Senate chamber on Nov. 3, has said she supports voting rights legislatio­n but not changing the filibuster to pass it.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times SEN. KYRSTEN SINEMA, seen leaving the Senate chamber on Nov. 3, has said she supports voting rights legislatio­n but not changing the filibuster to pass it.

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