UPDATE (Jan. 19. 2022, 9:00 p.m. ET): After hours of debate on the Senate floor, Democratic leaders failed to break the GOP’s voting rights blockade and advance the two voting rights bills via cloture vote.
Senate Democrats are once again set to see their hopes of passing new voting rights legislation dashed upon the cruel, unyielding filibuster and Republican obstructionism. The party’s leadership assures America that this will be a noble failure and that Democrats’ attempt to protect our democracy is worth the abject humiliation of yet another loss on a key issue.
It’s a disappointment we’ve seen all too often in the last year. This performance has been particularly galling when you consider that the legislation in question is not the federal takeover of elections that the GOP insists it is. It’s not even the most far-reaching set of reforms among the many that American elections need. Instead, it sets a floor, i.e., the absolute bare minimum that states can deliver in terms of voting rights protections in federal elections. And that, apparently, is too much to ask of the senators who will doom the legislation to defeat.
The party’s leadership assures America that this will be a noble failure.
The bill the House sent to the Senate last week is the fusion of the Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, forming the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act. This hybrid bill would both overhaul the way federal elections are run and restore key parts of the 1965 Voting Rights Act that have been eroded by the courts over the last decade.
This bill’s passage would mean no more partisan gerrymandering of congressional districts. It would mean online and Election Day voter registration nationally. It would mean that many of the methods of voting advocated for in the pandemic, including drop boxes for ballots and expanded absentee voting, would be made standard. And it would re-empower the Department of Justice to have states clear new election laws before they go into effect, ensuring that they don’t discriminate based on race or any other protected category.
Almost as important is what the bill would not do. It would not make participation in elections compulsory, as it is in Australia. It would not require automatic voter registration for federal elections upon turning 18, leaving it up to individuals to go through the process themselves. It would not offer voting to noncitizens at any level, as recent legislation in New York City has provided for residents in municipal elections. And it would not set up a nationwide universal vote-by-mail system akin to the ones states like Colorado and Washington have successfully managed for years.
It also would leave the states free to exceed the mandated minimums. Much like the federal minimum wage, state and local governments would be able to go above and beyond what’s required. Colorado and Washington would be allowed to keep mailing their citizens ballots; if a state wants to offer three weeks of in-person early voting instead of the 15 days the bill would require, that would be entirely fine.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has made a habit of defending Georgia’s new election law by drawing a comparison to President Joe Biden’s home state of Delaware. How can Georgia’s GOP-led Legislature be restricting voting rights but still provide more days for in-person early voting than Democrats in Wilmington, he asks. (Answer: When Georgia’s new rules are a rollback of previous ease.) The solution, though, isn’t to match the most restrictive laws nationwide when it comes to absentee balloting and voting by mail; it’s to provide a floor that Georgia and Delaware both have to meet.
Thanks to a bit of procedural trickery, the bill skipped the first possible GOP filibuster. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., on Tuesday filed cloture — the process to cut off debate and move to a vote — and blocked the chances of Republican amendments diluting the package on the Senate floor. But all signs point to the bill failing to get the 60 votes needed for cloture to pass.








