As Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders court black voters in South Carolina, they’re competing to stress their commitments to voting rights.
“Maybe this is personal because I run for office. Sometimes you lose, sometimes you win,” Sanders, a U.S. senator from Vermont, told MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow at Friday night’s Democratic forum from Rock Hill, S.C, when asked about Republican efforts to restrict voting. “It has never occurred to me as a candidate to figure out a way to deny the vote to people because they might vote against me. People who do that are political cowards. They’re afraid of a fair election.”
WATCH: Sanders: US has a voting rights crisis
Sanders called the GOP-led push to make voting harder a “crisis,” and said there might be a need for a constitutional amendment guaranteeing the right to vote.
“What Republicans are doing is so un-American, so outrageous. It is literally beyond belief,” Sanders said. “They’re political cowards, and if they can’t face a free election, they should get another job.”
Not to be outdone, Clinton used a town hall event with a largely African-American crowd Saturday at Claflin University to promote her own record on the issue.
Clinton, the clear front-runner in the Democratic race, blasted the Supreme Court for its 2013 ruling weakening the Voting Rights Act, saying the justices were “sending message to leaders that they could begin to try to find new ways to interfere in the right to vote.”
And she criticized Alabama officials for a plan unveiled last month to shut down drivers license offices in several predominantly black counties, which could make it harder to get a voter ID, as the state now requires voters to do.








