In early June, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) rejected his party’s For the People Act, deeming it overly ambitious in its scope. Soon after, the conservative Democrat unveiled an alternative package on voting rights, which Republicans promptly killed, despite elements that were specifically designed to make them happy.
At that point, the conventional wisdom concluded that the push to protect voting rights at the federal level was, for all intents and purposes, dead.
But it’s best not to give up hope just yet. The Washington Post reported yesterday afternoon:
Senate Democrats are preparing to release a revised voting rights bill as soon as this week, hoping to keep the legislation alive a month after Republicans blocked the consideration of a previous, more sweeping proposal. Several key senators huddled inside Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer’s office on Wednesday to hash out the details of the bill, which is expected to at least partially incorporate a framework assembled by Sen. Joe Manchin III (D-W.Va.), who expressed qualms about the previous bill, known as the For the People Act.
Sen. Raphael G. Warnock (D-Ga.), who asked Schumer to organize the private meeting, said after the discussion, “It’s important that the American people understand that this is very much on our radar, and we understand the urgency, and we’re committed to getting some progress.”
The plan, evidently, is to produce a new legislative proposal, based in part on Manchin’s own blueprint, “in a matter of days.”
There’s an obvious problem that hangs overhead: if the West Virginian will only consider voting-rights protections endorsed by both parties, Warnock’s efforts are doomed. That said, Manchin participated in yesterday’s meeting, and sounded encouraged after the discussion.
If the conservative Democrat intended to derail the effort — again — he gave no indication of that yesterday. On the contrary, Manchin agreed that a new bill will likely be released in the coming days.
And what happens when Senate Republicans make clear that they’ll never support such an effort? For now, that’s a difficult question to answer with confidence, but for voting-rights advocates, there are some hints of momentum.








