Over the last several decades, there have been nearly 200 attempts in Congress to approve anti-lynching legislation. Each failed. In late 2018, the Senate finally passed a bipartisan measure, but the Republican-led House didn’t advance it before the end of the 115th Congress.
In February 2019, the stage was finally set. The federal anti-lynching legislation was introduced by the Senate’s three African-American members — Sens. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), Cory Booker (D-N.J.) and Tim Scott (R-S.C.) — and it passed unanimously. The bill then went to the House, which passed it by a margin of 410 to 4.
The House did, however, make one symbolic tweak to the legislation: the Democratic-led chamber renamed the bill the Emmett Till Anti-Lynching Act, as a way to honor the memory of the 14-year-old young man who was lynched in Mississippi in 1955.
That minor change meant the Senate would have to pass the bill one last time. That was supposed to happen yesterday. It didn’t.
Raw feelings were evident as Sen. Rand Paul — who is single-handedly holding up the bill despite letting it pass last year — sought changes to the legislation as a condition of allowing it to pass.
Right off the bat, the Kentucky Republican’s timing could be better. Rand Paul, at least for now, blocked the anti-lynching bill in the midst of a national outcry of racial injustices. In fact, just yesterday, as the GOP senator quarreled with Booker and Harris over the proper legal definition of “lynching,” the memorial service was underway of George Floyd, who died after a police officer kneeled on his neck for almost nine minutes.
Making matters just a bit worse, Rand Paul isn’t the ideal messenger for the message: ahead of his Senate election in 2010, the former ophthalmologist raised objections to a key element of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.








