U.S. Democrats stockpile lawyers, money to fight Republican voting laws
Send a link to a friend
[February 28, 2022]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democrats are
gearing up to spend record sums on lawyers, advertising and other
protect-the-vote efforts before the 2022 midterm elections, hoping to
stave off Republican efforts they believe will choke off access to the
ballot box.
Worried that a spate of more restrictive voting laws adopted by
Republican-controlled states will keep Democrats from registering their
votes, donors big and small are filling their party's coffers.
The Democratic National Committee (DNC) took in $157 million last year,
the most for a year without a presidential election, and added $10
million more in January. More than half of Democrats' national funding
is coming from people donating less than $200, according to OpenSecrets,
which tracks political spending.
The party and allies have been setting aside a larger share of cash to
fight fires in the relatively few competitive local jurisdictions where
small changes can mean the difference between Republican and Democratic
victories.
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC), charged with
holding the party's House of Representatives majority during the Nov. 8
election, will commit at least $10 million to voting rights litigation,
according to a person familiar with the matter.
That eight-figure budget, which has not previously been reported and is
expected to at least match the DCCC's record spending in 2020, comes on
top of a $30 million commitment by the DNC for voter-registration and
litigation efforts as well as $10 million from the Senate campaign. A
person familiar with the operation said Democrats expect the largest
spending in history on such efforts.
The party-wide effort, still in its early stages, includes both
litigation to challenge laws like voter roll purges coupled with
targeted outreach on digital platforms to register new voters and
counter misinformation about voting as well as an effort to elect
Democrats to often-overlooked election administration positions like
secretaries of state.
"This is an all-hands-on-deck effort to ensure that every ballot is
counted," said Representative Nikema Williams, a Democrat from Georgia
spearheading the DCCC effort, adding that the investments were necessary
to counter a "decades-long crusade" by Republicans to "suppress the
vote."
That official effort is being paired by additional spending from outside
political groups, such as Priorities USA and American Bridge 21st
Century, that were traditionally focused on political ad spending.
American Bridge this month committed at least $10 million to efforts
including recruiting Democrats to run for office as elected voting
officials and fighting attempts to overturn future elections.
"Democrats have a pretty expansive voter-protection operation," said
Amir Badat, voting special counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense and
Educational Fund, a nonpartisan group that also engages in significant
voting rights litigation.
Still, Badat said he expects new challenges this year.
He is concerned efforts by vigilantes who threatened voters and election
officials in 2020 will expand, especially given new laws making it
easier for poll watchers to observe voters. He sees the midterms as a
dry run for the next presidential election.
"A lot of the things that happen in 2022 are going to be an experiment
for what can be done in 2024, mostly from the point of what suppressive
tactics can work," he said.
[to top of second column]
|
President Joe Biden speaks during a holiday celebration for the
Democratic National Committee (DNC), at the Hotel Washington, in
Washington, U.S, December 14, 2021. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
REPUBLICANS MATCH EFFORTS
Democratic efforts are also being countered by an equally energized
and well-funded Republican effort.
A person familiar with the Republican National Committee's spending
said the party would budget "millions more" on voting issues and
that ensuring that "the 2022 and 2024 elections proceed in a free,
fair, and transparent fashion is one of our top priorities." The
party is hiring lawyers in 17 target states and is already engaged
in over 30 related lawsuits, the person said.
So far, before the campaign season even kicks off, Democrats and
Republicans are running about neck-and-neck in legal and related
spending at $52 million apiece ahead of the election for control of
Congress, according to OpenSecrets.
Democrats and Republicans each spent about $120 million on legal
fees during the 2020 showdown between Biden and Republican former
President Donald Trump, the data showed.
In Texas, for instance, home to the opening House party primary
contests on Tuesday, Republican lawmakers instituted more stringent
identification requirements for people who vote by mail.
Local election officials in Texas' largest counties say early
evidence shows that a significant share of mailed-in ballots
arriving for the election don't meet new requirements for reasons as
simple as the voter used an ID card different from the one they
provided when they registered.
After the last election, Trump allies blitzed courts with lawsuits
challenging the legitimacy of the election.
But the Republican effort to challenge the election was telegraphed
early by Trump and failed in courts. Democrats also succeeded in
convincing courts to expand options like vote-by-mail during the
pandemic. A record 155 million people voted in the 2020 election won
by Biden.
Republicans have fought back to tighten access to the polls. And
conservative courts have since dealt some setbacks to efforts to
expand access.
Lawyers are expecting to be busier than ever. Last year, mega-lawyer
Marc Elias, who works for the Democrats, split with Perkins Coie LLP
to found his own 65-counselor firm in Washington focused on the
litigation effort.
The party expects a spate of issues like the Texas restrictions,
which it hopes can be corrected with aggressive legal action and
quick-footed organizing.
Legislators in 27 states are considering over 250 bills with
restrictive voting provisions, as of January, compared to 75 bills a
year ago, according to the Brennan Center for Justice at New York
University School of Law, an advocacy group.
Civil rights activists argue the measures have a disproportionate
impact on ethnic minorities, who vote in larger measure for
Democrats.
"It's going to be an uphill battle," said Aneesa McMillan, deputy
executive director of Priorities USA, which budgeted at least $20
million for its voting rights efforts. "It's a coordinated attack on
marginalized communities."
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Heather Timmons and
Andrea Ricci)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |