Clinton
pushes for easier voting access, hits Republicans on voting rights
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[June 05, 2015]
By Erwin Seba
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Democratic
presidential contender Hillary Clinton called on Thursday for changes to
election laws to make it easier to vote, and condemned several
Republican rivals for backing efforts that she said keep poor, young and
minority voters from the polls.
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At a speech at historically black Texas Southern University,
Clinton said restrictive voting laws passed by Republican-led state
legislatures in recent years are part of a "sweeping effort to
disempower and disenfranchise people of color, poor people and young
people."
Clinton called for every U.S. citizen to be automatically registered
to vote when they turn 18, unless they actively choose to opt out,
and backed a new standard of at least 20 days of early in-person
voting in every state, including weekend and evening voting.
"We should be clearing the way for more people to vote, not putting
up every roadblock anyone can imagine," said Clinton, who is the
2016 Democratic front-runner.
Clinton's remarks put her on the front lines of a longstanding
partisan battle over recent voting restrictions approved by
Republican-led legislatures in Texas, Wisconsin, Florida, North
Carolina and other states.
Democrats, who are pursuing legal challenges to some of the laws,
say restrictions such as strict photo identification requirements
for voters and cutbacks in early voting make the process harder for
lower-income and minority voters and are designed to suppress
turnout among those Democratic constituencies.
Republicans have defended the laws as necessary to combat voter
fraud. They were quick to condemn Clinton's comments as "misleading
and divisive."
"In reality, the vast majority of Americans – including minority
voters – support commonsense measures to prevent voter fraud," the
spokesman for the Republican National Committee, Orlando Watson,
said. "Clinton's shameless attacks ignore the fact her Democrat-led
home state of New York does not allow early voting while dozens of
Republican-led states do."
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Clinton took aim by name at four current or potential 2016
Republican presidential contenders - Wisconsin Governor Scott
Walker, former Texas Governor Rick Perry, New Jersey Governor Chris
Christie and former Florida Governor Jeb Bush.
She criticized Perry for backing a package of restrictive laws in
Texas, Walker for cutbacks in early voting, Christie for vetoing
legislation to extend early voting and Bush for allowing Florida
officials to purge voter rolls before the 2000 election.
Clinton also urged Congress to pass laws to repair the "damage" to
the 1965 Voting Rights Act from a 2013 Supreme Court decision. The
court invalidated a section of the act requiring areas with a
history of racial discrimination, mainly in the South, to get
federal approval for changes to voting laws.
"Today, Republicans are systematically and deliberately trying to
stop millions of American citizens from voting. What part of
democracy are they afraid of?" she asked.
(Writing by John Whitesides; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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