The Columbus Dispatch

Don’t believe Dems’ Big Lie of ‘Jim Crow 2.0’

- Your Turn Mitch Mcconnell Special to Louisville Courier Journal Guest columnist

Editor’s note: This is Sen. Mitch Mcconnell’s response to the Al Cross column “Is our democracy in danger? Mitch Mcconnell doesn’t seem to think so,” that printed in the Louisville Courier Journal on Jan. 9.

The Democrats’ political agenda is on the rocks in Washington, so they’ve set their sights on a new prize: the complete, partisan takeover of all 50 states’ election laws. They are justifying this naked power grab by stoking fear and spreading falsehoods. Kentuckian­s should see through these liberal lies.

Washington Democrats have desperatel­y wanted to take over our elections for years, even though their justificat­ion seems to change every election cycle. After losing the White House in 2016, they said the takeover was necessary because our democracy was fundamenta­lly broken. Now that they’ve won the White House, their story has flipped: Our democracy is in perfect shape, except when Republican-controlled states dare to pass mainstream voting laws.

Across the Left, partisan operatives are breathless­ly repeating newly-minted talking points to justify this political pivot. They claim that whenever a state adjusts early voting procedures or implements voter ID requiremen­ts, it somehow amounts to “Jim Crow 2.0.”

These claims insult the intelligen­ce of Kentucky voters and are nothing more than a Big Lie meant to undermine faith in our democratic process.

Our democracy is not, in fact, in crisis. The 2020 elections saw the highest turnout in more than 100 years. 94% of voters in that election said the voting process was easy. In many of the Republican-led states where Democrats claim “Jim Crow 2.0” is out in force – like Mississipp­i, Tennessee and Missouri – Black voter turnout routinely outpaces white voter turnout. These are signs of a healthy democracy, not one on its deathbed.

Washington Democrats are using their Big Lie to justify all sorts of insane proposals. In the Senate, they promise to abolish the legislativ­e filibuster, claiming that destroying our institutio­n is the only way to “restore” it. Kentucky – a smaller state with two Republican senators – needs the filibuster to have a voice in the Senate. Without it, Washington Democrats could pack the Supreme Court, give amnesty to those entering the country illegally, and grant statehood to Washington, D.C., without input from Kentucky’s Senators at all.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-NY, once said nuking filibuster rules would be “doomsday for democracy.” Less than a year ago, President Joe Biden said, tearing up these long-establishe­d Senate procedures would “throw the entire Congress into chaos.” Now that Democrats stand to benefit from abolishing the filibuster, though, they’re happy to ignore their prior warnings.

These liberals knowingly cloak their election takeover plot in lofty rhetoric to avoid explaining what their bills actually do. But peer behind the curtain and their sweeping goal becomes obvious: They hope to give themselves an advantage in elections across the country.

Washington Democrats want to force all 50 states to legalize corrupt ballot harvesting, giving political organizers the ability to handle ballots – a responsibi­lity generally reserved for nonpartisa­n election overseers. They want to require taxpayers to subsidize the political campaigns of individual­s with whom they vehemently disagree. They would hand Attorney General Merrick Garland unpreceden­ted powers to micromanag­e every state’s election laws, giving the Department of Justice veto power over state legislator­s. Some of the Democrats’ proposals – like same-day voter registrati­on and no-excuse absentee voting – are so unpopular, they were even rejected in liberal New York three months ago.

In Kentucky, they would tear up the widely-praised election laws our state legislatur­e passed last year with overwhelmi­ng, bipartisan majorities. Our Democratic governor called these new rules “a model for the nation,” but Schumer and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., want to overrule the Commonweal­th on every aspect of them. From ID requiremen­ts to ballot counting protocol, liberals think Somerset should work like San Francisco and Covington like Chicago. But as our Secretary of State said so well, “Kentucky knows best what’s best for Kentucky.”

These proposals have nothing to do with the 2020 election, the 2016 election or any other farce Washington Democrats have invented to justify their takeover. This is not about bolstering faith in our democracy or restoring our institutio­ns — it’s just the opposite. These bills are a bald-faced attempt by liberals to rig our electoral systems in their own favor.

I’ve proudly stood in opposition to the Democrats’ election takeover bills and encourage all Kentuckian­s to do the same. Don’t believe their Big Lie about “Jim Crow 2.0” or any other nonsense. We must do all we can to keep the Commonweal­th’s elections free from liberal interferen­ce.

Mitch Mcconnell, a Kentucky Republican, is the U.S. Senate minority leader.

This column originally appeared on Courier-journal.com

These proposals have nothing to do with the 2020 election, the 2016 election or any other farce Washington Democrats have invented to justify their takeover. This is not about bolstering faith in our democracy or restoring our institutio­ns — it’s just the opposite. These bills are a bald-faced attempt by liberals to rig our electoral systems in their own favor.

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