Top Senate Republican blasts Biden's 'rant' on voter rights, vows to
oppose bill
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[January 13, 2022]
By Richard Cowan and Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Top U.S. Senate
Republican Mitch McConnell on Wednesday blasted President Joe Biden's
push for a voting-rights bill, underscoring the difficulty Biden's
Democrats face in trying to steer legislation through a Congress they
narrowly control.
Biden has called for Democrats to jettison the chamber's longstanding
"filibuster " rule requiring 60 of the 100 senators to agree to advance
most legislation, a move that McConnell said would irreparably damage
the Senate.
"The president's rant yesterday was incoherent, incorrect and beneath
his office," McConnell said on the Senate floor, referring to Biden's
speech in Atlanta on Tuesday in which he appealed for voting-rights
legislation and called Republicans cowardly for not supporting it.
McConnell accused the president of giving "a deliberately divisive
speech that was designed to pull our country further apart."
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki told reporters the administration
was disappointed by McConnell's opposition to the bill.
"It is even more disappointing that someone who has supported and
advocated for voting rights in the past ... is on the other side of this
argument now," Psaki said.
Biden plans to make a personal plea to Senate Democrats on Thursday,
urging them to agree on changing or eliminating the filibuster so they
can pass the voting rights bill.
Former President Donald Trump's false claims that his 2020 election
defeat was the result of fraud inspired a wave of new restrictions on
voting in Republican-controlled states last year.
Democrats see their voting rights bills as a last chance to counter
those ahead of the Nov. 8 elections, when they run the risk of losing
their razor-thin majorities in at least one chamber of Congress.
Since Trump's defeat, Republican lawmakers in 19 states have passed
dozens of laws making it harder to vote. Critics say these measures
target minorities, who vote in greater proportions for Democrats.
The Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act
together would make Election Day a holiday, expand access to mail-in
voting and strengthen U.S. Justice Department oversight of local
election jurisdictions with a history of discrimination.
"Twelve months ago the president said that politics need not be a raging
fire destroying everything in its path," McConnell said. "But yesterday
he poured a giant can of gasoline on the fire."
Republicans argue that the bills Democrats are proposing are an
infringement of states' rights to run their elections. They come as
Trump supporters who have embraced his false claims of election fraud
are running for offices that could give them oversight over local
elections. Democrats and election analysts have raised concerns that
they could use those posts to influence election outcomes.
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Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on Wednesday blasted
President Joe Biden and his speech on voting rights calling it a
"rant" that was "beneath his office."
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer
on Wednesday outlined a strategy to ensure a Senate floor debate on
voting rights, after three separate attempts last year were stymied
by Republicans.
Under the plan, outlined in a Schumer memo to fellow Democrats that
was seen by Reuters, the House of Representatives will soon
repackage two election-related bills into one and pass it. It would
then go to the Senate under a special procedure preventing
Republicans from blocking debate.
"We will finally have an opportunity to debate voting rights
legislation – something that Republicans have thus far denied,"
Schumer wrote in the memo.
But if Republicans remain united in opposition, even that bill will
not pass the Senate unless all Democrats agree to change the
filibuster, he said.
Centrist Democratic Senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema are
opposed to the idea, saying it would cause turmoil with every change
of control in Washington.
Schumer has set a deadline for a vote on the election reforms by the
Jan. 17 holiday honoring the slain civil rights hero Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr.
EROSION OF FILIBUSTER
For at least a decade, worries about atrophy in the Senate have led
to calls for revising or scrapping the filibuster, which allows a
minority of senators to block bills.
In 2013, Democrats, fed up with then-President Barack Obama's
nominees languishing amid Republican filibusters, scrapped the
60-vote majority needed to confirm most federal judges and
administration appointees. Four years later, Republicans ended the
filibuster for Supreme Court nominations, clearing the way for Trump
to install three conservative justices during his presidency.
That 6-3 conservative court has agreed to take up major cases this
year on the hot-button issues of abortion and guns that could
dramatically change American life.
Biden had previously opposed changing the filibuster rule but more
recently has argued that voting rights reforms were urgently needed
even if it meant weakening that procedure.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan, Jeff Mason and Moira Warburton; Writing
by Doina Chiacu; Editing by Scott Malone, Franklin Paul, Aurora
Ellis and Cynthia Osterman)
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