As Republicans successfully blocked Democratic voting rights legislation again last night, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell fielded a few reporters’ questions. One asked, “What’s your message for voters of color who are concerned that without the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, they’re not going to be able to vote in the midterms?”
The Kentucky Republican, who’s spent months pretending his party hasn’t imposed new voting restrictions, offered a response that generated a lot of attention for a reason:
“Well, the concern is misplaced, because if you look at the statistics, African-American voters are voting in just as high a percentage as Americans.”
At face value, the comments were controversial for an obvious reason: The Senate GOP leader seemed to suggest that he sees a distinction between Americans and African Americans. It was reminiscent of the time National Review published an item on then-President Barack Obama’s popularity in 2009, arguing that his “sky-high ratings among African-Americans make some of his positions appear a bit more popular overall than they actually are.”
But if we’re generous and give McConnell the benefit of the doubt, it’s likely that he meant Black voters participate in elections at roughly the same rate as American averages overall.
The trouble is, that’s not quite right, either. As a Washington Post analysis explained:
With the exception of 2008 and 2012, Black turnout and Hispanic turnout have consistently been below White turnout. Saying that Black turnout aligns with the national level ignores that disparity. It’s like saying that Amy earns the average income on her team, since she makes $50,000 a year, Beth and Claire make $20,000, and Danielle makes $110,000. See? Everything’s fair.
Complicating matters is the Republican’s retrospective perspective in self-defeating ways. Indeed, after making his controversial comments, McConnell added, “A recent survey, 94 percent of Americans thought it was easier to vote. This is not a problem. Turnout is up, biggest turnout since 1900. It’s simply — they’re being sold a bill of goods.”
The poll he referenced exists: The Pew Research Center really did find that 94 percent of American voters described voting as easy in the 2020 cycle.
But the last four words of the last sentence are the ones that matter most. As we recently discussed, the Pew poll was conducted in November 2020. In the months that followed, Republican policymakers, fueled by Donald Trump’s Big Lie, approved 33 laws in 19 states that make it harder for Americans to participate in their own democracy. And as dramatic as these efforts were in 2021, there’s already evidence the GOP’s anti-voting crusade will continue in 2022.








