Over the summer, as Democrats debated how best to approach the For the People Act, more than 100 American scholars who specialize in democracy studies unveiled a joint public statement. Their warning was unsubtle: The United States’ system of government, the experts said, is “now at risk.”
As part of their efforts, the scholars, many of whom have devoted much of their lives to studying the breakdowns in democracies abroad, pleaded with lawmakers to act. “We urge members of Congress to do whatever is necessary — including suspending the filibuster — in order to pass national voting and election administration standards,” the experts wrote.
As regular readers may recall, West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin derailed the For the People Act soon after.
For proponents of democracy and voting rights, that was the bad news. The good news, on the other hand, was that Manchin and a sizable group of other Senate Democrats reached a compromise agreement on a legislative alternative called the Freedom to Vote Act.
It’s against this backdrop that an even larger number of democracy scholars are effectively pleading with the governing majority to pass the bill. Axios reported over the weekend:
“Defenders of democracy in America still have a slim window of opportunity to act. But time is ticking away, and midnight is approaching,” according to more than 150 top scholars of U.S. democracy in a new push to temporarily suspend the Senate filibuster and pass voting rights protections on a simple majority vote.
The full letter from the scholars is online, and it’s explicit in its endorsement of the Freedom to Vote Act, which they describe as “the most important piece of legislation to defend and strengthen American democracy since the Voting Rights Act of 1965.”
The experts explained, “This is no ordinary moment in the course of our democracy. It is a moment of great peril and risk. Though disputes over the legitimacy of America’s elections have been growing for two decades, they have taken a catastrophic turn since the 2020 election.” In academic circles, this would generally be seen as hair-on-fire rhetoric:
“The partisan politicization of what has long been trustworthy, non-partisan administration of elections represents a clear and present threat to the future of electoral democracy in the United States. The history of other crisis-ridden democracies tells us this threat cannot be wished away. It must be promptly and forthrightly confronted. Failure to pass the Freedom to Vote Act would heighten post-election disputes, weaken government legitimacy, and damage America’s international reputation as a beacon of democracy in the world. If Congress fails to pass the Freedom to Vote Act, American democracy will be at critical risk.”
The question, of course, is not whether Senate Republicans will act to protect our democracy — they’ve already said they will refuse — but rather whether Senate Democrats are prepared to carve out an exception to the chamber’s filibuster and pass the legislation through majority rule.








