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		Top Senate Republican blasts sweeping U.S. election reform bill as 
		'power grab'
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		 [March 25, 2021] 
		By Susan Cornwell 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The top Republican 
		in the U.S. Senate on Wednesday blasted a sweeping election reform bill 
		passed by the Democrat-led House of Representatives earlier this month 
		as a "partisan power grab."
 
 Democrats say the bill, which updates voting procedures and requires 
		states to turn over the redrawing of congressional district lines to 
		independent commissions, is needed to overcome Republican efforts to 
		make voting across the country harder.
 
 "This is clearly an effort by one party to rewrite the rules of the 
		political system," Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said at the 
		start of a rules committee hearing. "We should be finding ways to 
		rebuild trust, not destroy it further. That’s exactly what a partisan 
		power grab would guarantee."
 
		
		 
		
 Many Republican-controlled state legislatures are exploring steps that 
		voting-rights advocates say would reduce turnout after record-setting 
		participation in the November 2020 general election.
 
 One of the losers in November was former President Donald Trump, who 
		falsely claimed that his defeat was the result of widespread voter 
		fraud. Courts largely rejected the claims and state and federal reviews 
		found no evidence to support them.
 
 The House-passed bill faces an uphill battle in the 50-50 Senate, where 
		Democrats hold the majority by virtue of Democratic Vice President 
		Kamala Harris' tie-breaking vote, but most legislation needs 60 votes to 
		pass.
 
 With Republicans vowing to fight the bill, some Senate Democrats argue 
		that it is time to eliminate or pare back the 60-vote rule - known as 
		the filibuster - to allow legislation to pass with a simple majority, as 
		it is in the House.
 
 One independent senator who caucuses with Democrats, Angus King of 
		Maine, signaled on Wednesday that he would back changing the filibuster 
		if Republicans block the voting rights legislation.
 
 "All-out opposition to reasonable voting rights protections cannot be 
		enabled by the filibuster," King wrote in the Washington Post. "If 
		forced to choose between a Senate rule and democracy itself, I know 
		where I will come down."
 
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			Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell listens to a fellow U.S. 
			Senator speak to reporters after the Republican lunch on Capitol 
			Hill in Washington, U.S., March 23, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque 
            
			 
            But other Democrats, including Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia, 
			say they oppose changing the filibuster rule. Manchin is also the 
			only Senate Democrat who has not co-sponsored the election reform 
			bill. He told CNN on Wednesday he wanted to see changes before he 
			can support it.
 Senate Republicans said they were ready to filibuster the bill, 
			which they say would "federalize" elections instead of leaving them 
			to states and localities.
 
 "There is no amount of time that I will not dedicate on the Senate 
			floor to stop the Democrats from passing this kind of radical 
			legislation," said Senator Tom Cotton.
 
 But Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Republican efforts to 
			restrict voting smacked of "Jim Crow" era laws adopted by some 
			states designed to disenfranchise blacks, which remained on the 
			books until the mid-20th century.
 
 One proposal currently under consideration in Arizona would require 
			every absentee ballot to be notarized, putting the poor at a 
			disadvantage, he said. Another in Georgia would eliminate early 
			voting on Sunday, when many African-Americans traditionally cast 
			their ballots.
 
 "Instead of doing what they should be doing when you lose an 
			election in a democracy - attempting to win over those voters in the 
			next election - Republicans instead are trying to disenfranchise 
			those voters," Schumer said.
 
            
			 
			(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Scott Malone and Sonya 
			Hepinstall) 
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