The Oklahoman

Senate mounts push on voting rights bill

- Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON – Senate Democrats are set to try again to advance a sweeping elections and voting overhaul bill, testing objections from Republican­s with a vote planned for next week, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced Thursday.

In a letter to colleagues, Schumer, DN.Y., said Republican­s “must come to the table” to at least open debate on the bill. Weeks in the making, the new version was drafted in hopes of winning over support at a time when states continue mounting obstacles to voting.

If the Republican senators have ideas “on how to improve the legislatio­n, we are prepared to hear them, debate them, and if they are in line with the goals of the legislatio­n, include them in the bill,” Schumer said.

He challenged Republican­s not to oppose the measure, blocking it with a filibuster, and “at the very least, vote to open debate.”

A test vote is expected next week. Prospects appear dim for the Freedom to Vote Act, a revised effort by Democrats to advance one of their signature legislativ­e efforts this year – protecting and enhancing the nation’s patchwork of state-run election systems. The push for an overhaul comes as Texas and other states are putting in place new voting laws that critics argue are a return to Jim Crow-style restrictio­ns making it difficult to cast ballots, especially in Black and minority communitie­s.

A key Democrat, Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, has led the effort to revise an earlier version of the bill that ran into stiff GOP opposition. He, too, had concerns with its scope. But it is doubtful Manchin’s effort on the nowscaled back bill will win over many Republican supporters.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky has decried the entire effort as a federal takeover of state-run election systems.

In the works for weeks, the revised legislatio­n includes many of the same provisions as the previous bill, known as the For the People Act.

It would establish national rules for running elections and includes provisions that would limit, but not prohibit, state voter ID requiremen­ts, which are being implemente­d in many states.

 ?? ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES ?? The push for a voting rights overhaul comes as some states are creating new laws that critics argue make it difficult to cast ballots.
ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES The push for a voting rights overhaul comes as some states are creating new laws that critics argue make it difficult to cast ballots.

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