Senators on Wednesday took a procedural vote on whether to limit
debate on the overall bill. Under the chamber's filibuster rule,
at least 60 senators must consent to take that step, requiring
bipartisan support since the chamber is divided 50-50.
It cleared the initial hurdle with a bipartisan vote of 92-6.
It was not immediately clear when the Senate would vote on final
passage of the bill. Schumer told Democrats in a meeting on
Tuesday that the goal was to pass the bill by the end of the
week, according to a Senate Democratic source in the meeting.
The bill, led by Democratic Senator Mazie Hirono and
Congresswoman Grace Meng, comes after a spate of high-profile
attacks on Asian Americans. It designates a Justice Department
employee to expedite a review of hate crimes reported to police
during the COVID-19 pandemic.
It would also provide guidance for state and local law
enforcement agencies to report hate crimes, expand public
education campaigns and issue guidance to combat discriminatory
language in describing the pandemic.
Reports of violence and discrimination against Asian Americans
have surged during the pandemic, after former President Donald
Trump started calling the coronavirus the "China virus."
"At a time when the AAPI community is under siege, this bill is
an important signal that Congress is taking anti-Asian racism
and hatred seriously," said Hirono, using an acronym referring
to Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, before the vote.
Hirono said she was working with Republican Senator Susan
Collins on additional language to broaden support for the bill
and supported a bipartisan amendment that would add the "No Hate
Act" to the legislation.
That amendment, led by Democrat Richard Blumenthal and
Republican Jerry Moran in the Senate, would train law
enforcement agencies on hate crime investigations and expand
resources for victims, among other measures.
The bill, which was first introduced in the House of
Representatives in 2016 by Congressman Don Beyer, was
reintroduced in that chamber earlier this month.
(Reporting by Makini Brice and David Morgan; additional
reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Scott Malone and Aurora
Ellis)
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