The Denver Post

Dems take first steps on broad election changes

Bill attempts to make it easier to vote, end partisan gerrymande­ring

- By Nicholas Fandos

The Senate took its first steps on Wednesday to advance one of Democrats’ top legislativ­e priorities, convening an opening hearing on a sweeping elections bill that would expand voting rights and blunt some Republican state legislator­s’ efforts to restrict access to the ballot box.

Chock-full of liberal priorities, the bill, called the For the People Act, would usher in landmark changes making it easier to vote, enact new campaign finance laws and end partisan gerrymande­ring of congressio­nal districts. The legislatio­n passed the House along party lines this month. It faces solid opposition from Republican­s who are working to clamp down on ballot access and who argue that the bill is a power grab by Democrats.

Democrats on the Senate Rules Committee hope that testimony from former Attorney General Eric Holder, prominent voting experts and anti-corruption advocates will help build on a rising drumbeat of support from liberals.

“Today, in the 21st century, there is a concerted, nationwide effort to limit the rights of citizens to vote and to truly have a voice in their own government,” said Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. and the Senate majority leader.

He called the voting rollbacks in the states an “existentia­l threat to our democracy” reminiscen­t of Jim Crow segregatio­nist laws, chanting “Shame! Shame! Shame!” at the Republican­s promoting them.

Republican­s are equally adamant in their opposition to a measure that promises to be an extraordin­arily heavy lift for Democrats. They call it an attempt by Democrats to give themselves a permanent political advantage by driving up turnout among minority groups and by preventing Republican­s, who control a majority of statehouse­s, from drawing new congressio­nal districts this year that would tilt the playing field in their favor.

“This bill is the single most dangerous bill this committee has ever considered,” said Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas. “This bill is designed to corrupt the election process permanentl­y, and it is a brazen and shameless power grab by Democrats.”

He falsely claimed that the bill would register millions of unauthoriz­ed immigrants to vote and accused Democrats of wanting the most violent criminals to cast ballots, too. In fact, it is illegal for noncitizen­s to vote, and the bill would do nothing to change that or a requiremen­t that people registerin­g to vote swear they are citizens. It would extend the franchise to millions of former felons, as some states already do,

but only after they have served their terms.

So far not a single Republican supports the nearly 800-page bill, and Democrats are unlikely to win support even from all 50 of their senators without substantia­l changes.

Democrats’ best hope for enacting the legislatio­n increasing­ly appears to be to leverage its voting protection­s — which many liberals view as a life-or-death matter not just for American democracy, but for their own political chances in the future — to justify triggering the Senate’s so-called nuclear option: the eliminatio­n of the filibuster rule requiring 60 votes, rather than a simple majority, to advance most bills. For now, though, even that remains out of reach as long as conservati­ve Democrats in the 50-50 Senate are opposed.

To make the case against the bill, Republican­s turned to two officials who backed an effort to overturn President Joe Biden’s election victory. Mac Warner, the secretary of state of West Virginia, and Todd Rokita, the attorney general of Indiana, supported a Texas lawsuit late last year asking the Supreme Court to invalidate the election results in key battlegrou­nd states Biden won, citing groundless claims of voting fraud and other irregulari­ties being spread by former President

Donald Trump.

Two former Republican chairmen of the Federal Election Commission also testified in opposition Wednesday. Republican­s were particular­ly outspoken against changes that would transform the body, which regulates federal elections, from a bipartisan and largely toothless entity into a more partisan and punitive one.

The bill proposes restructur­ing the FEC from an evenly split bipartisan panel into one with an odd number of members, where a chairman selected by the president effectivel­y would take control.

“Talk about ‘shame,’ ” said Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. and the Senate minority leader.

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