U.S. attorney general vows to aggressively defend voting rights
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[June 12, 2021]
By Andy Sullivan and Jan Wolfe
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Attorney General
Merrick Garland said on Friday his Justice Department will aggressively
enforce voting rights at a time when many Republican-led states are
tightening election laws and supporters of former President Donald Trump
continue to baselessly question his 2020 defeat.
Garland said the Justice Department will prosecute threats against
election officials, double the number of prosecutors devoted to voting
rights and closely examine how states conduct their elections.
He said the Justice Department will scrutinize areas where Black voters
have to wait in line longer than white voters to cast their ballots, a
lingering problem in presidential election battleground states such as
Georgia.
"There are many things that are open to debate in America but the right
of all eligible citizens to vote is not one of them," Garland said in a
speech at the Justice Department.
Garland's announcement marks a shift in policy for the Justice
Department, which under Trump dropped several ambitious voting rights
lawsuits and brought only one case under the Voting Rights Act of 1965,
a landmark civil rights law.
That law required states with a history of discrimination to get
permission from the Justice Department before changing the way they ran
elections, until the Supreme Court struck down the provision in 2013.
That led to a surge of changes in southern, Republican-led states that
voting rights advocates say have disproportionately affected Black and
Hispanic voters.
Garland urged Congress to restore that power to the Justice Department,
which he said was used to block more than 1,000 proposed local election
changes between 1965 and 2006. Democrats, who control both chambers of
Congress, support the idea but have not yet introduced legislation on it
this year.
The attorney general also urged Congress to pass a separate voting
rights bill that has bogged down in the Senate, where Democrats lack the
votes to advance it.
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U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland delivers remarks on voting
rights at the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington, U.S., June
11, 2021. Tom Brenner/Pool via REUTERS
Following Trump's 2020 defeat, Republicans have
passed a wave of new voting requirements and limits this year in
battleground states such as Georgia, Florida and Arizona. Texas is
expected to pass similar restrictions in coming months, over
Democratic lawmakers' objections.
Trump falsely claimed that the election was stolen from him through
widespread voting fraud.
A total of 14 U.S. states have enacted new laws that make it more
difficult for Americans to vote, according to a recent report from
the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law.
Garland did not make clear whether he would challenge any of those
new laws in court. He said a Republican-led audit of the 2020
election in Arizona might amount to voter intimidation, but did not
say whether the Justice Department would intervene.
Voting rights advocates praised Garland's announcement as a welcome
reversal of course from the Trump administration even though it was
short on promises of concrete action.
"Let's see what the DOJ (Department of Justice) actually files in
the coming months - that's the real test," University of California,
Irvine law professor Rick Hasen wrote on Twitter.
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan and Jan Wolfe; Additional reporting by
Jason Lange and Mark Hosenball; Editing by Will Dunham and Alistair
Bell)
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