House passes sweeping voting rights bill over GOP opposition

House Democrats passed sweeping voting and ethics legislation Wednesday over unanimous Republican opposition, advancing to the Senate what would be the largest overhaul of the U.S. election law in at least a generation.
House Resolution 1, which touches
on virtually every aspect of the electoral process, was approved on a near
party-line 220-210 vote. It would restrict partisan gerrymandering of
congressional districts, strike down hurdles to voting and bring transparency
to a murky campaign finance system that allows wealthy donors to anonymously
bankroll political causes.
The bill is a powerful
counterweight to voting rights restrictions advancing in Republican-controlled
statehouses across the country in the wake of Donald Trump’s repeated false
claims of a stolen 2020 election. Yet it faces an uncertain fate in the
Democratic-controlled Senate, where it has little chance of passing without
changes to procedural rules that currently allow Republicans to block it.
The stakes in the outcome are
monumental, cutting to the foundational idea that one person equals one vote,
and carrying with it the potential to shape election outcomes for years to
come. It also offers a test of how hard President Joe Biden and his party are
willing to fight for their priorities, as well as those of their voters.
This bill “will put a stop at the
voter suppression that we’re seeing debated right now,” said Rep. Nikema
Williams, a new congresswoman who represents the Georgia district that deceased
voting rights champion John Lewis held for years. “This bill is the ‘Good
Trouble’ he fought for his entire life.”
To Republicans, however, it would
give license to unwanted federal interference in states’ authority to conduct
their own elections — ultimately benefiting Democrats through higher turnout,
most notably among minorities.
“Democrats want to use their razor-thin majority
not to pass bills to earn voters’ trust, but to ensure they don’t lose more
seats in the next election,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said from the
House floor Tuesday.
The measure has been a priority
for Democrats since they won their House majority in 2018. But it has taken on
added urgency in the wake of Trump’s false claims, which incited the deadly
storming of the U.S. Capitol in January.
Courts and even Trump’s last
attorney general, William Barr, found his claims about the election to be
without merit. But, spurred on by those lies, state lawmakers across the U.S.
have filed more than 200 bills in 43 states that would limit ballot access,
according to a tally kept by the Brennan Center for Justice at New York
University.
In Iowa, the legislature voted to
cut absentee and in-person early voting, while preventing local elections
officials from setting up additional locations to make early voting easier. In
Georgia, the House on Monday voted for legislation requiring identification to
vote by mail that would also allow counties to cancel early in-person voting on
Sundays, when many Black voters cast ballots after church.
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court
appeared ready to uphold voting restrictions in Arizona, which could make it
harder to challenge state election laws in the future.
When asked why proponents sought
to uphold the Arizona laws, which limit who can turn in absentee ballots and
enable ballots to be thrown out if they are cast in the wrong precinct, a
lawyer for the state’s Republican Party was stunningly clear.
“Because it puts us at a competitive
disadvantage relative to Democrats,” said attorney Michael Carvin. “Politics is
a zero-sum game.”
Battle lines are quickly being
drawn by outside groups who plan to spend millions of dollars on advertising
and outreach campaigns.
Republicans “are not even being
coy about it. They are saying the ‘quiet parts’ out loud,” said Tiffany Muller,
the president of End Citizens United, a left-leaning group that aims to curtail
the influence of corporate money in politics. Her organization has launched a
$10 million effort supporting the bill. “For them, this isn’t about protecting
our democracy or protecting our elections. This is about pure partisan
political gain.”
Conservatives, meanwhile, are
mobilizing a $5 million pressure campaign, urging moderate Senate Democrats to
oppose rule changes needed to pass the measure.
“H.R. 1 is not about making elections better,”
said Ken Cuccinelli, a former Trump administration Homeland Security official
who is leading the effort. “It’s about the opposite. It’s intended to dirty up
elections.”
So what’s actually in the bill?
H.R. 1 would require states to
automatically register eligible voters, as well as offer same-day registration.
It would limit states’ ability to purge registered voters from their rolls and
restore former felons’ voting rights. Among dozens of other provisions, it
would also require states to offer 15 days of early voting and allow no-excuse
absentee balloting.
On the cusp of a once-in-a-decade
redrawing of congressional district boundaries, typically a fiercely partisan
affair, the bill would mandate that nonpartisan commissions handle the process
instead of state legislatures.
Many Republican opponents in
Congress have focused on narrower aspects, like the creation of a public
financing system for congressional campaigns that would be funded through fines
and settlement proceeds raised from corporate bad actors.
They’ve also attacked an effort to
revamp the federal government’s toothless elections cop. That agency, the
Federal Election Commission, has been gripped by partisan deadlock for years,
allowing campaign finance law violators to go mostly unchecked.
Another section that’s been a
focus of Republican ire would force the disclosure of donors to “dark money”
political groups, which are a magnet for wealthy interests looking to influence
the political process while remaining anonymous.
Still, the biggest obstacles lie
ahead in the Senate, which is split 50-50 between Republicans and Democrats.
On some legislation, it takes only
51 votes to pass, with Vice President Kamala Harris as the tiebreaker. On a
deeply divisive bill like this one, they would need 60 votes under the Senate’s
rules to overcome a Republican filibuster — a tally they are unlikely to reach.
Some Democrats have discussed
options like lowering the threshold to break a filibuster, or creating a
workaround that would allow priority legislation, including a separate John
Lewis Voting Rights bill, to be exempt. Biden has been cool to filibuster
reforms and Democratic congressional aides say the conversations are fluid but
underway.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck
Schumer has not committed to a timeframe but vowed “to figure out the best way
to get big, bold action on a whole lot of fronts.”
He said: “We’re not going to be the legislative graveyard. ... People are going to be forced to vote on them, yes or no, on a whole lot of very important and serious issues.”