The Arizona Republic

Six bills wait for action in Senate

Democratic leader doesn’t see ‘graveyard’

- Sarah Elbeshbish­i

WASHINGTON – In an evenly divided Senate, becoming a “legislativ­e graveyard” seems to be hard to avoid, even at the insistence of Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

“We are not going to be a legislativ­e graveyard, very simply,” Schumer said in March. “People are going to be forced to vote on them – ‘yes’ or ‘no’ on a whole lot of very important and serious issues.”

For years, the Senate was a place bills went to die while Republican­s had the majority under Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., who refused to bring Democratic­led legislatio­n to the chamber floor for a vote.

Though Schumer brings bills to the floor, the 50/50 split along hard partisan lines preventsth­e 60 votes needed to avoid a filibuster and bring the legislatio­n to a vote.

The For the People Act – a sweepingbi­ll that would protect voters’ rights and increase election security – is a highprofil­e example of legislatio­n that Senate Democrats were unable to pass.

Schumer is undeterred. The New York senator promised to bring several more pieces of legislatio­n to the Senate floor.

The Equality Act

One of the pieces of legislatio­n awaiting the Senate is the Equality Act, which would prohibit discrimina­tion on the basis of sex, sexual orientatio­n and gender identity. This bill would be the second passed by Congress to protect the LGBTQ community from discrimina­tion.

The legislatio­n would expand protection­s of federal civil rights laws to members of the LGBTQ community and protect the community from discrimina­tion in housing, public spaces and employment benefits as an increasing number of states pass laws restrictin­g LGBTQ rights.

The House passed the Equality Act in February on a mainly party-line vote, though three Republican­s voted with all Democrats to pass the legislatio­n. On the same day, Schumer declared his support of the legislatio­n and announced that he would bring it to the Senate floor.

“I will use my power as majority leader to put it on the floor, and let’s see where everybody stands,” Schumer said.

2002 war resolution

The House voted to repeal the 2002 war resolution that allowed for the U.S. military’s invasion of Iraq. It’s a measure the House has previously approved that has been unable to pass the Senate.

The White House and the Senate’s Democratic leaders have voiced support for the bill, and Schumer vowed to bring it to the floor this year.

“The Iraq War has been over for nearly a decade. An authorizat­ion passed in 2002 is no longer necessary in 2021,” Schumer said, emphasizin­g that the United States wouldn’t “abandon our relationsh­ip with Iraq and its people.”

The nearly two-decade-old resolution authorized President George W.

Bush to use the U.S. military as “he determines to be necessary and appropriat­e” to defend U.S. national security against “the continuing threat posed by Iraq.”

The measure passed the House 268161, 49 Republican­s voting with Democrats to repeal the war authorizat­ion.

DC Admission Act

Another House-passed piece of legislatio­n, the Washington, D.C., Admission Act, would give the District of Columbia statehood.

The new state – something residents have been pushing for decades – would be named Washington, Douglass Commonweal­th, after abolitioni­st Frederick Douglass.

If passed, residents would – for the first time – get voting representa­tives in Congress. The new state would get two senators and one representa­tive in the House, based on its population. Residents pay taxes and can vote in presidenti­al elections but have no vote in Congress.

This is the second time a statehood bill has passed the House. The Republican-controlled Senate didn’t bring it to a vote during the last congressio­nal session

in 2020.

The American Dream and Promise Act and Farm Workforce Modernizat­ion Act

The American Dream and Promise Act and the Farm Workforce Modernizat­ion Act are two immigratio­n-related bills that passed the House, both mainly on partisan lines.

The American Dream and Promise Act would allow recipients of the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program the ability to live and work in the USA. The legislatio­n passed 228-197, and nine Republican­s voted in support of the bill.

The future of the DACA program is uncertain, challenged by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and officials from eight other states.

The Farm Workforce Modernizat­ion Act, which would provide a pathway to legal status for more than 1 million undocument­ed farmworker­s, received more bipartisan support than the American Dream and Promise Act – 30 Republican­s voted with Democrats – and it passed the House on a vote of 247-174.

Bipartisan Background Checks Act

The Bipartisan Background Checks Act of 2021 is one of two House-passed bills that would create stricter gun sales regulation­s as gun violence rises in the USA.

The bill would expand the requiremen­t of background checks to more firearms sales and transfers. Federal law requires background checks only for licensed gun dealers; the measure would mandate background checks for private individual­s and groups in an attempt to close the “gun show loophole.”

It would be illegal for those not licensed as a firearm importer, manufactur­er or dealer to trade or sell firearms. Though the legislatio­n would create stricter background check laws, it wouldn’t create a federal registry to review them.

Schumer vowed to bring the background checks bill to the floor despite the lack of support for any gun control from his GOP colleagues.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., aims to get bills before the Senate despite Republican opposition.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., aims to get bills before the Senate despite Republican opposition.

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