Biden's order comes on the 56th anniversary of the 1965 "Bloody
Sunday" when state troopers and police attacked civil rights
marchers in Selma, Alabama, who were protesting racial
discrimination at the voting booth.
"The legacy of the march in Selma is that while nothing can stop
a free people from exercising their most sacred power as a
citizen, there are those who will do everything they can to take
that power away," Biden said in pre-taped remarks to the "Martin
& Coretta Scott King Unity Breakfast" released on Sunday.
Last week Democrats in the House of Representatives passed
sweeping legislation to update voting procedures and require
states to turn over the task of redrawing congressional
districts to independent commissions. That bill faces tough
chances of passing the Senate.
Biden urged the Senate to pass the bill.
His executive order directs federal agencies to submit plans
within 200 days that outline steps to expand voter registration
and distribute election information to voters. It also directs
the U.S. chief information officer to modernize federal websites
and digital services that provide such details.
The push by Democrats to make it easier to vote comes as
Republican lawmakers in dozens of states have moved to restrict
voting access after former President Donald Trump's loss in the
November election.
Trump falsely claimed the 2020 election was rigged and
criticized vote-by-mail efforts put in place during the
coronavirus pandemic. On Jan. 6, after a rally in which Trump
urged them to fight, his supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol as
lawmakers were meeting to certify Biden's win.
Biden cited the historic turnout in the 2020 election in the
midst of the deadly coronavirus pandemic.
"Yet instead of celebrating this powerful demonstration of
voting – we have seen an unprecedented insurrection in our
Capitol and a brutal attack on our democracy on Jan. 6th," he
said. "And to think that it’s been followed by an all-out
assault on the right to vote in state legislatures all across
the country happening right now."
More than 250 bills with provisions that restrict voting access
have been introduced in 43 states during the current legislative
session, a senior administration official told reporters, citing
a report from the Brennan Center for Justice.
Biden's executive order will also direct federal agencies to
assist states with voter registration, push the General Services
Administration to submit a plan to modernize the website
Vote.gov, and mandate measures to increase voting access for
federal employees, overseas voters and active duty military
members.
(Reporting by Nandita Bose and Jeff Mason; Editing by Richard
Chang and Daniel Wallis)
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