Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Democrats urged to deliver on voting bill

- By By Brian Slodysko and Christina A. Cassidy

Congressio­nal Democrats are facing renewed pressure to pass legislatio­n that would protect voting rights after a Supreme Court ruling made it harder to challenge Republican efforts to limit ballot access in many states.

The 6-3 ruling Thursday on a case out of Arizona was the second time in a decade that conservati­ves on the Supreme Court have weakened components of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, a landmark civil rights-era law. But this opinion was released in a much different political climate, in the aftermath of President Donald Trump’s lie that last year’s election was stolen.

Trump’s claims spurred Republican­s in states such as Georgia and Florida to pass tougher rules on voting under the cloak of election integrity.

Democrats on Capitol Hill have already tried to respond with a sweeping voting and elections bill that Senate Republican­s united to block last week. A separate bill, the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancemen­t Act, which would restore sections of the Voting Rights Act that the Supreme Court previously weakened, has been similarly dismissed by most Republican­s.

Those setbacks, combined with the Supreme Court’s decision, have fueled a sense of urgency among Democrats to act while they still have narrow majorities in the House and Senate. But passing voting legislatio­n at this point would almost certainly require changes to the filibuster, allowing Democrats to act without GOP support.

“Absolutely this increases the pressure to take a very hard look at whether the Senate is an institutio­n that will allow itself to be rendered powerless and dysfunctio­nal,” said Rep. John Sarbanes, a Maryland Democrat who sponsored a voting bill that passed the House in March.

Change won’t be easy. A group of moderate Democratic senators, including Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, have ruled out revisions to the filibuster. In an evenly divided Senate, their rejection denies the votes needed to move forward with a procedural change.

Thursday’s ruling was on a case in Sinema’s home state. In an opinion by Justice Samuel Alito, the court reversed an appellate ruling in deciding that Arizona’s regulation­s — on who can return early ballots for another person and on refusing to count ballots cast in the wrong precinct — are not racially discrimina­tory.

Sinema assailed the decision in a statement, saying it would “hurt Arizonans’ ability to make their voices heard at the ballot box” and reiterated her support for the bill. Sinema’s spokeswoma­n Hannah Hurley said the senator’s position remains what she outlined in an op-ed last week, in which Sinema argued eliminatin­g the filibuster to pass the voting bill would weaken the ability of Democrats to stop voting restrictio­ns in the future when they are no longer in the majority.

Democrats, who say the issue is an existentia­l one for democracy and who need the support of voters of color in next year’s midterms, quickly condemned the court’s decision.

“If you believe in open and fair democracy and the principle of one person, one vote, today is one of the darkest days in all of the Supreme Court’s history,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called the ruling an “unpreceden­ted assault” that “greenlight­s the brutal, accelerati­ng campaign of voter suppressio­n.”

Speaking in Florida, President Joe Biden said he would have “much more to say” soon, but largely sidesteppe­d comment.

For their part, Republican­s show no sign of willingnes­s to engage with Democrats on the issue.

“The states created the federal government, and it’s not up to Chuck or Nancy or anyone else in Washington, D.C., to tell Arizona or anyone else how they should conduct an election,” Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich, who was a party in the case, said on Fox News.

 ?? JONATHAN ERNEST — REUTERS ?? The Supreme Court ruled 6-3to uphold restrictiv­e voting measures in Arizona. Democrats are facing pressure to pass a federal voting rights measure as Republican-controlled states pass restrictio­ns.
JONATHAN ERNEST — REUTERS The Supreme Court ruled 6-3to uphold restrictiv­e voting measures in Arizona. Democrats are facing pressure to pass a federal voting rights measure as Republican-controlled states pass restrictio­ns.

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