November 29, 2024

Senate Republicans block voting rights reform bill despite unified Democratic support

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Senate Republicans block voting rights reform bill despite unified Democratic support

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Republicans on Tuesday blocked the Senate from moving forward on a sweeping elections reform bill known as the For The People Act that was a top priority for congressional Democrats and President Joe Biden.

Democrats were able to stay unified — with West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin voting with his party in the procedural vote to open debate on the measure — but their 50 votes in favor fell 10 short of the 60 needed under Senate rules to advance legislation.

Vice President Kamala Harris, whom Biden has tasked with getting voting rights reform passed, presided in her role as president of the Senate and announced the 50-50 final vote in the Democratic defeat.

All GOP senators voted no.

Immediately afterward, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer took the floor to blast Republicans. “Once again, Senate Republicans have signed their names in the ledger of history alongside Donald Trump, the big lie, and voter suppression to enduring disgrace,” he said.

“We have several serious options for how to reconsider this issue and advance legislation to combat voter suppression,” Schumer continued. “We are going to explore every last one of our options. We have to. Voting rights are too important too fundamental this concerns the very core of our democracy and what we are about as a nation so we will not let it go. We will not let it die. This voter suppression cannot stand and we are going to work tirelessly to see that it does not stand,” he said.

John Thune, Rick Scott are posing for a picture © Alex Wong/Getty Images MORE: Manchin to join Democrats in Senate showdown vote over voting rights

Republicans had accused Democrats of a blatant power grab.

John Thune, Rick Scott are posing for a picture: Sen. John Barrasso, Senate Minority Whip Sen. John Thune, Sen. Rick Scott and Senate Minority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell during a news briefing after the weekly Senate Republican Policy Luncheon at the Capitol, June 22, 2021, in Washington, DC. © Alex Wong/Getty Images Sen. John Barrasso, Senate Minority Whip Sen. John Thune, Sen. Rick Scott and Senate Minority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell during a news briefing after the weekly Senate Republican Policy Luncheon at the Capitol, June 22, 2021, in Washington, DC.

“What this is really about is an effort of the federal government to take over the way we conduct elections in this country. It is a solution in search of a problem. And so finally today we will put an end to it here in the Senate,” McConnell told reporters before the vote.

But Democrats insisted that a federal response was needed to the 14 red states across the country where Republicans have enacted laws critics say curb voting of minority voters who tend to support Democrats.

MORE: Former President Obama expresses support for Manchin’s voting rights compromise

“What kind of Congress would we be in the whole history of Congresses if seeing that discussion out there we refuse to even debate the matter in here? Who are we and how are we to hide in a moment like this?” Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., asked his colleagues.

“So I rise … with what I think is a simple request to my colleagues. Let’s do our job. Resist the easy route, the temptation to hide behind Senate procedure, and let’s have a principled conversation in front of the American people about voting rights,” Warnock said on the Senate floor before the critical vote.

Joe Manchin wearing a suit and tie: Sen. Joe Manchin walks near the Senate subway on Capitol Hill in Washington, June 22, 2021. © Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP Sen. Joe Manchin walks near the Senate subway on Capitol Hill in Washington, June 22, 2021.

Earlier in the day, Schumer announced he had won the last-minute support of Manchin, the lone holdout member of his caucus — a key victory presenting a unified front to GOP opposition despite the failed vote.

“We got it,” Schumer said with a grin, announcing the agreement that he reached with Manchin to allow him to offer an amendment to make changes to the basic reform bill should the Democratic majority be able to secure 60 votes to break the GOP filibuster and start debate on the bill.

“We just got to keep working,” Manchin, who has opposed changing the Senate’s filibuster rule, told ABC News Congressional Correspondent Rachel Scott earlier in the day.

Harris, speaking to reporters afterward, said, “when we’re talking about the right to vote, it is not a Republican concern or a Democratic concern, it is an American concern. This is about the American people’s right to vote, unfettered.

“The fight is not over,” she said.

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