U.S. Democrats set voting rights showdown with no clear path to victory
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[January 19, 2022]
By Richard Cowan and Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe
Biden's Democrats took their push to protect U.S. voting rights to the
floor of the Senate on Tuesday, where legislation is roundly expected to
fail in the face of united Republican opposition.
Democrats argue the legislation, backed by civil rights groups , is
needed to counter a Republican-led drive to make it more difficult to
vote at the state level, especially for Black and other minority voters.
Republicans are again expected to block passage of the sweeping
legislation, arguing it is a partisan effort that would undermine local
control of elections. Three times last year Republicans stood in the way
of Democratic voting rights legislation.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a Democrat, cited the urgency of
what he called an onslaught of new state limits to poll access. He said
a showdown vote on a bill establishing new minimum standards for federal
elections administered by states would be held sometime this week.
The outcome could come as soon as Wednesday if all 100 senators agree to
that expedited timing. Otherwise, it is expected on Thursday.
"Democrats are prepared to fight on this issue until we succeed,"
Schumer said. "We have not reached the place where every person can vote
easily and openly and honestly," he added.
Democrats are scrambling to act while they still narrowly control both
chambers of Congress. Republicans are favored to take a majority in at
least one chamber in next November's mid-term elections.
With other elements of Biden's domestic agenda stalled on Capitol Hill,
Biden has called the vote a significant moment for a U.S. democracy
facing crisis.
A Republican vote to block the legislation would trigger an attempt to
change the Senate's filibuster rule so that a simple majority of the
100-member Senate, instead of 60 votes, would be needed to pave the way
for passing the bill, Schumer said.
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U.S. Senator Raphael Warnock (D-GA) speaks to reporters after a
Senate Democrats caucus meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S.,
January 18, 2022. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
At an evening news conference
following a closed-door meeting of the 50-member Senate Democratic
Caucus, Schumer announced that the rules change proposal would
require a "talking filibuster." That means that senators trying to
kill legislation would have to come to the chamber and actually
stand and talk -- possibly for hours or days -- and not just
passively oppose limiting endless debate time.
The rules change, possible if backed by all 50 Democratic votes and
with Vice President Kamala Harris as the tie breaker, is also likely
to fail amid opposition from at least two Democratic senators.
Those two conservative Democrats, Kyrsten Sinema and Joe Manchin,
met with Biden to discuss the matter on Thursday, but have given no
indication since that their opinion has shifted.
"I've never changed my mind on (altering) the filibuster," Manchin
told reporters Tuesday evening.
If the effort fails, the Senate could attempt to cobble together a
far narrower election-reform bill, as some Republicans say
they would like to avoid a repeat of the chaos that followed the
2020 U.S. presidential election when then-President Donald Trump
falsely claimed he lost due to fraud.
The legislation now before the Senate would expand access to mail-in
voting, tighten campaign finance rules, and strengthen federal
oversight of elections in states that have a history of racial
discrimination.
Lawmakers in 19 U.S. states have passed dozens of laws since Trump's
defeat limiting voting times and mail-in ballots and raising
voter-ID requirements.
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan, Richard Cowan and David Morgan; Editing
by Heather Timmons, Paul Simao, Howard Goller and Leslie Adler)
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