Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) raised a few eyebrows yesterday with a bizarre justification of the Republican Party’s entire voter-suppression initiative: he said it doesn’t exist.
“States are not engaging in trying to suppress voters whatsoever,” McConnell claimed, adding that legislation designed to protect voting rights is “a solution in search of a problem.”
Even by the GOP leader’s standards, it was a brazen lie. Literally hundreds of voter-suppression proposals are currently pending in state legislatures nationwide, and to pretend otherwise is ridiculous.
But as it turns out, McConnell wasn’t the only member of the Senate Republican leadership making the case that voting-rights legislation is unnecessary. TPM noted yesterday:
Sen. Roy Blunt (R-MO), the top Republican on the Senate Rules Committee which was hosting the hearing, repeatedly made the claim that legislatures weren’t actually moving forward with the bills deemed to be restrictive. Blunt said it was a “false narrative” that “states are passing massive legislation that changes the voting structure to people’s disadvantage.”
The Missouri Republican added, “There’s always bills filed, almost none of which passed.”
What I like about Blunt’s argument is that it’s not quite as absurd as his party’s other talking points. In recent weeks, GOP officials have tried to defend systemic voter-suppression tactics with outlandish nonsense, such as pointing to imagined “fraud” in the 2020 presidential race, or in McConnell’s case, denying the tactics’ existence.
But Blunt’s pushback has a kernel of truth: every year, all kinds of bills are introduced in state legislatures nationwide. Many of them are ludicrous, which in turn generates attention, but they’re also ultimately ignored. When the Missourian suggested yesterday that some of the pending voter-suppression proposals will simply disappear without serious consideration, he was right.
The trouble, however, is with the word “some.”









