Republicans Block Democrats' 'Rotten' Election Reform Bill from Passing
GOP stopped attempt to 'tilt every election permanently in [Dems'] favor,' McConnell says

Republican lawmakers have successfully blocked the Democrats' radical election reform bill from passing the Senate.
On Tuesday, GOP senators shot down an attempt by Democrats to pass their “For the People Act” election bill, which has been widely criticized as partisan.
“All 50 Democrats voted for the procedural measure, but it drew no GOP support, leaving it short of the 60 votes needed to overcome a Republican filibuster,” The Wall Street Journal reported.
“Democratic centrists, most prominently Mr. Manchin and Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, have rejected ending the filibuster, though some have suggested ways to weaken it.”
Democrats have repeatedly sought to cast the filibuster as racist in an attempt to pressure senators to abolish it so they can ram through President Joe Biden’s liberal agenda.
Democrats repeatedly used the filibuster to stop Republicans from advancing legislation under former President Donald Trump and Republicans had to hold “time-sapping roll call votes to break a filibuster and end debate on nominees a whopping 314 times” under Trump, compared to a total of 244 times under all previous presidents combined, according to Politico.

No Republicans joined with the 50 Democrats on the motion to proceed.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said Republicans won't stand for Democrats' attempt to impose new voting standards on states that would "rig" elections in their favor.
He called the substance of the nearly 900-page bill "rotten" to its core.
The rotten inner workings of Democrats' S.1 power grab have been thoroughly exposed to the light. Whichever label Democrats slap on their bill, the substance remains the same. https://t.co/1mU9ghcajr
— Leader McConnell (@LeaderMcConnell) June 22, 2021
Republicans took issue with imposing federal standards on state elections that they said would weaken state ID requirements, according to Fox News.
They also oppose starting a new public financing system for congressional elections and politicizing the Federal Elections Commission that enforces campaign finance laws.
Even GOP moderate Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska said she couldn't support the "partisan federal takeover of the election system."
In a floor speech, she said she'd back elements of the bill and will co-sponsor the separate John Lewis Voting Rights Act, but can't back Democrats' "one-size-fits-all" reforms.
Democrats, with the White House on their side, framed the legislation as an urgent priority to save democracy in the face of GOP efforts in state legislatures around the country to pass "voter suppression laws" in the wake of President Donald Trump's 2020 election loss and claims of widespread voter fraud.
"Democracy is in peril, here, in America," Joe Biden's White House said in a statement Tuesday supporting the bill.
"The right to vote – a sacred right in this country – is under assault with an intensity and an aggressiveness we have not seen in a long time."
Voting rights have been such a concern for the White House that Kamala Harris presided over the debate on the Senate floor Tuesday evening and announced the failed 50-50 vote.
Afterward, she said the White House is committed to ensuring access to the polls.
"The fight is not over," she told reporters at the Capitol.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) accused the GOP of being "afraid" to debate the merits of voting rights because they'd be forced to defend their efforts to disenfranchise voters.
"I want to be clear about what just happened on the Senate floor," Schumer said immediately following the vote.
"Every single Senate Republican just voted against starting debate … on legislation to protect Americans' voting rights."
He added: "This vote, I'm ashamed to say, is further evidence that voter suppression has become part of the official platform of the Republican Party."
The "For the People Act" was numbered H.R. 1 and S.1 in the House and Senate to signify it was the top priority of Democratic leadership.
The bill already passed the House with no GOP support.
The voting rights legislation, if enacted, would take aim at big-dollar donors and dark money in politics by requiring additional disclosure of campaign donors and disclaimers on political advertising.
Presidential candidates would also be required to release their tax returns.
It would set up a new 6-1 public matching financing system for congressional elections to encourage more grassroots donations and require states to adopt independent redistricting commissions to prevent partisan gerrymandering.
And the legislation would set basic standards for states to run elections, such as mandating at least 15 days of early voting, setting up automatic voter registration, and permitting the use of student IDs or sworn written statements in states that have voter identification requirements.

While all 50 Democrats were united in moving to debate the bill, with Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., striking a last-minute deal with Schumer, Democrats are deeply divided on what to do next.
A top Democratic political adviser criticized his own party for wasting time on the S.1 legislation that won't pass.
Dmitri Mehlhorn, a key confidant to Democratic funder Reid Hoffman, argued the legislative push was setting the party up for failure and "dragging me and my country off a cliff," according to a report in POLITICO.
Progressives are demanding that Senate Democrats get rid of the legislative filibuster so they can pass the sweeping election reforms, D.C. statehood bill, gun control, and police reform bills without any GOP support.
But Manchin and Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema have doubled down on their opposition to eliminating the filibuster, meaning any pathway forward on voting reforms would need GOP support.