I believe Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., when he says he believes in the institutions and traditions of the Senate. I believe him when he says he wants to find common ground with the Republicans he works with in the Senate chamber each day.
But I also believe Manchin operates with an eye firmly on West Virginia and its people, not the country as a whole. It’s an increasingly antiquated view that he brandishes in defense of an increasingly antiquated chamber. His myopia toward the needs of the United States versus his home state fuels his unwillingness to act in defense of democracy as we know it. As a result, Manchin’s love of a state born over 150 years ago during a struggle to preserve the Union could, in the end, be the Union’s ruin.
That’s not how Manchin sees it, though, as he explained Sunday in an op-ed announcing that he opposes the For the People Act. Manchin is the only member of the 50-senator Democratic caucus that is against the election overhaul bill, because, as he wrote, “partisan voting legislation will destroy the already weakening binds of our democracy.”
He added that he won’t vote to weaken or eliminate the filibuster to pass any voting rights laws; instead, he will “fight to represent the people of West Virginia, to seek bipartisan compromise no matter how difficult and to develop the political bonds that end divisions and help unite the country we love.”
I’m forced to set aside the poor writing and belabored logic, because Manchin’s piece wasn’t written for me or anyone in the political class outside West Virginia. It’s written for a local audience, which is why it was placed in the Charleston Gazette-Mail, his state’s largest newspaper, and not The New York Times or The Washington Post.
Manchin’s love of a state born over 150 years ago out of a struggle to preserve the Union could, in the end, be the ruin of it.
“I have always said, ‘If I can’t go home and explain it, I can’t vote for it,’” Manchin wrote. “And I cannot explain strictly partisan election reform or blowing up the Senate rules to expedite one party’s agenda.” Nor does he even really try. His essay doesn’t delve into the details of the For the People Act — there’s no “why” that even explains the parts that he’s against. He’s content to list its faults as being a “more than 800-page bill” that “has garnered zero Republican support.”
Two paradoxes are inherent in Manchin’s thinking. First and foremost: Of course there’s no Republican support for a bill that would curtail attempts by states’ Republican-led legislatures to disenfranchise voters! Why would there be?!
Second, and more important for this essay, as a representative of his state and its voters, Manchin finds it necessary to prove he isn’t beholden to the national Democratic Party’s agenda over the needs of West Virginians. But in protecting his constituents’ interests as he defines them, he leaves them vulnerable to the machinations that Republicans have set into motion across the country.
But here’s the real kicker: Unless the senator’s office has some private polling that they’d like to share, Manchin’s assumptions about what West Virginians want are wrong. According to a poll released last month — commissioned by End Citizens United and Let America Vote Action Fund and conducted by Global Strategy Group and ALG Research — the For the People Act is wildly popular among likely voters in West Virginia. Like “76 percent of Republicans are in favor” levels of popularity, to say nothing of the 79 percent of independents and 81 percent of Democrats.
Manchin, who in his op-ed touts his past role as West Virginia’s secretary of state, has to know the GOP-controlled Legislature has moved to edit the state’s election laws after the 2020 campaign. While not as egregious as some states’ revisions, Senate Bill 565 would still make voting more difficult by: swapping the state’s opt-out system for automatic voter registration at the DMV for an opt-in system, pushing back the deadline to request absentee ballots and permitting easier and more frequent purges of voter rolls.








