In visit to Philadelphia, Biden pushing for stalled voting rights law
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[July 13, 2021]
By Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democratic U.S.
President Joe Biden, under pressure from civil rights leaders, travels
to Philadelphia on Tuesday to issue a strong appeal for sweeping voting
rights legislation that is stalled in Congress due largely to Republican
opposition.
About a dozen Republican-controlled states have approved laws that
either restrict voting or change election rules in response to
Republican then-President Donald Trump's baseless claims that voter
fraud prevented him from winning the 2020 presidential election.
While Biden's voting rights legislation faces an uphill battle in
Congress, his focus on it allows him to rally support among Democratic
voters as Democrats work to hold on to control of Congress in the 2022
midterm congressional elections.
Last month, Senate Republicans blocked a Democratic-backed national
election reform bill that would have expanded opportunities to
vote before Election Day, made certain campaign contributions more
transparent and reformed the process for the drawing of congressional
districts. Republicans said it violated states' authority to set their
own election laws.
White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki said on Monday that in his
Philadelphia speech, Biden will call efforts to strip the right to vote
from some Americans "authoritarian and anti-American" and "the worst
challenge to our democracy since the Civil War."
He will make a "moral case for why denying the right to vote is a form
of suppression and a form of silencing," and discuss steps the
administration plans to take to shore up voting rights, she told
reporters.
The city chosen for Biden's speech at the National Constitution Center
holds potent symbolism for many Americans. The Declaration of
Independence and the U.S. Constitution were both signed at Independence
Hall, just steps away from the center.
Biden met last week with civil rights leaders who pushed him to keep
fighting on the voting issue despite Republican resistance. The
president's top priority in recent weeks has been working on getting
congressional approval of a bipartisan $1.2 trillion infrastructure
package .
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President Joe Biden delivers remarks during a visit to the northwest
Chicago suburb of Crystal Lake, Illinois, U.S., July 7, 2021.
REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo
Biden's speech in Philadelphia will address the
ongoing "onslaught of voter suppression laws based on a dangerous
and discredited conspiracy theory that culminated in an assault (on
Jan. 6) on our Capitol," Psaki said.
Biden's fellow Democrats have struggled along with civil rights
groups to fight the spate of voting restrictions that critics say
are aimed at Black, Hispanic and younger voters, who have helped
elect Democrats.
In Texas on Monday, dozens of Democratic lawmakers left that
state as part of an orchestrated move to derail their Republican
colleagues' efforts to pass voting restriction legislation and other
conservative measures in a special legislative session.
Republican state legislators say their new voting laws are designed
to enhance election security, citing Trump's claims that he lost due
to widespread fraud. Those claims were rejected by multiple courts,
state election authorities and Trump's own administration.
Republican governors in Georgia, Arizona, Florida and Iowa signed
new voting restrictions into law this year.
Pennsylvania's state legislature approved a Republican-backed bill
requiring voter identification, but the Democratic governor vetoed
it on June 30 .
In Michigan, Republican lawmakers also approved legislation
mandating new voting limits, but that state's Democratic governor is
expected to veto it.
(Reporting by Steve Holland; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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