The Democratic-led Senate Judiciary Committee held an important hearing this week: “Jim Crow 2021: The Latest Assault on the Right to Vote.” With Republican officials nationwide having launched the most dramatic attack on the franchise in generations, the need for the hearing was obvious, and Democrats invited leading voices on voting rights, including Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) and the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund’s Sherrilyn Ifill, to testify as witnesses.
But it was former state Sen. Stacey Abrams (D-Ga.) whom Republicans seemed especially eager to tangle with.
Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.), for example, apparently thought he could trip up Abrams with a question about her own state’s new voter-suppression law. “Tell me specifically,” the far-right Louisianan said, “just give me a list of the provisions that you object to.”
So, she did:
“It shortens the federal runoff period from nine weeks to four weeks. It restricts the time a voter can request and return an absentee ballot application. It requires that voters have a photo identification or some other form of identification that they are willing to surrender in order to participate in the absentee ballot process.”
Apparently underwhelmed, the Louisiana Republican asked, “What else?” At which point, Abrams returned to her indictment of the Georgia law:
“It eliminates over 300 hours of drop box availability. It bans nearly all out-of-precinct votes, meaning that if you get to a precinct and you are in line for four hours and you get to the end of the line and you are not there between 5 and 7 p.m., you have to start all over again.”
Kennedy, who initiated this line of questioning, responded, “Is that everything?” As it turned out, no, it wasn’t everything. Abrams added:









