The Columbus Dispatch

Manchin backs voting rights measure

- Laura Litvan

Senior Senate Democrats have reached agreement with moderate Sen. Joe Manchin on a broad overhaul of U.S. voting rights law, a developmen­t that should unify all Democrats in the chamber behind a single plan for the first time.

The voting measure would create an automatic voter registrati­on system through each state’s motor vehicle agency, makes Election Day a public holiday and provide voters with at least 15 days of early voting for federal elections.

It also is designed to curtail “gerrymande­ring” of congressio­nal districts and would put in place new campaign finance disclosure requiremen­ts that include mandating super-pacs and other outside groups report their donors.

The agreement comes after months of negotiatio­ns with Manchin, who withheld his support from a far more expansive Democratic proposal.

But the measure still doesn’t have the Republican backing needed to advance to debate on the floor of the Senate, which is divided 50-50 between the two parties.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Monday that a deal was near and that he would hold a vote next week to bring up the measure.

Even without the support needed to prevail, such a tally would put all senators on record and allow Democrats to show unity on the matter heading into next year’s midterm elections.

The fight over ballot restrictio­ns flared over the summer as Democratic lawmakers in Texas fled the state for 38 days to delay action on a slate of new limits on voting there.

Republican legislatur­es around the country have been seeking to tighten voting rules, arguing changes are needed for election security following former President Donald Trump’s false claims that he was denied a re-election victory because of voting fraud.

Civil rights leaders and progressiv­e groups are demanding the Senate eliminate or carve out a new exception to its traditiona­l filibuster rule if the Republican minority uses the tactic to block protection of what they consider fundamenta­l constituti­onal rights. However, Manchin and Democratic Senator Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona oppose changing the rules, denying Democratic leaders the needed votes to do that.

 ?? DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? Sen. Joe Manchin, right, had withheld his support from a far more expansive Democratic proposal on voting rights.
DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES/TNS Sen. Joe Manchin, right, had withheld his support from a far more expansive Democratic proposal on voting rights.

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