House passes bill bolstering landmark voting law
The bill, which is part of a broader Democratic effort to enact a sweeping overhaul of elections, was approved on a 219-212 vote, with no Republican support. Its Tuesday passage was praised by President
But the measure faces dim prospects in that chamber, where
That bottleneck puts
But they still intend to try.
Speaking from the House floor, Speaker
"Democracy is under attack from what is the worst voter suppression campaign in America since Jim Crow,” Pelosi said.
The John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, named for the late
The practice was first put in place under the Voting Rights Act of 1965. But it was struck down by a conservative majority on the
A second ruling from the court in July made it more difficult to challenge voting restrictions in court under another section of the law.
The bill’s sponsor, Rep.
“While literacy tests and poll taxes no longer exist, certain states and local jurisdictions have passed laws that are modern day barriers to voting,” said Sewell, an
In many cases, the new bill wouldn't apply to laws enacted in the years since the court's 2013 ruling. That likely includes the wave of new Republican-backed restrictions inspired by
But if signed into law along with
In the short term, the vote Tuesday was expected to soothe restive Democratic activists who have been frustrated by inaction on the issue in the
“Make no mistake, we will be there, on the ground in 2022, in every state that needs a new Senator,” he said in a statement.
It's also not clear that the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, as written, would be supported by all
One provision in the bill would ban many types of voter ID laws, including those already on the books. That's at odds with a proposal from
"If there’s any moment in time to put an election aside, if there’s any moment of time to put politics aside I would have thought today was this day,” said House Minority Leader
Conservatives also criticized the bill as a departure from the 1965 voting law, which used minority turnout data as well as a place's history of enacting discriminatory voting laws when determining which places would be subject to preclearance.
The new bill, instead, leans heavily on looser standards, such as using the number of legal settlements and consent decrees issued in voting rights cases, to pull places into preclearance.
That would,
Rep.
“It empowers the attorney general to bully states and seek federal approval before making changes to their own voting laws,” she said.
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