WASHINGTON – A sprawling voting rights bill led by Senate Democrats survived a marathon session Tuesday of the Senate Rules Committee, chaired by Democrat Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota.
An effort to advance the legislation that touches everything from voter registration to absentee ballots and campaign finance got a party-line 9-9 tie vote in the evenly divided committee. But Senate rules allow Democrats and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to try to bring the legislation forward to the full Senate.
Klobuchar made it clear immediately afterward that that's the plan.
"This is not the last you will hear; in fact this is the beginning," Klobuchar told lawmakers after the vote, as she pointed to the power Democrats have as the chamber's majority party.
For much of the day, the committee struggled to find major common ground on the legislation. Klobuchar said the bill, dubbed the For the People Act, would set "basic national standards" for U.S. elections. Laws being put in place by some Republican state legislatures to restrict absentee voting and early voting used in the 2020 elections have been "coordinated and overwhelming," Klobuchar said.
She described the GOP-led push in dozens of states as "real efforts to stop people from voting."
The ranking Republican on the committee, Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri, countered that the legislation amounts to a federal takeover of elections and is a "bad bill filled with bad policies."
The partisan gridlock was clear when the committee voted along party lines after nearly two hours of debate on a package of changes Klobuchar offered. Klobuchar's amendments sought to adjust some deadlines and offer other changes designed to accommodate difficulties state and local election officials said they would have in meeting the bill's requirements.