One of the most pressing issues that the United States faces in 2022 is voting rights. Republicans have unveiled maps that squarely put elections in their favor in places like Ohio. If thatâs not enough, an avalanche of anti-voting rights legislation have hit places like Lincoln County, Georgia. Many have been shouting from the rooftops about this issue, but itâs the people at the top need to echo their sentiments.
Both President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris took to the airways this past week to give the battle for voting rights a national forum. In an interview with ABC âWorld News Tonight,â anchor David Muir asked President Biden about making changes to rules in the Senate to move voting rights legislation through.
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âAre you prepared to support fundamental changes in the Senate rules to get this done?â Muir asked Biden on Wednesday during a sit-down interview at the White House.
âYes,â Biden replied.
âWhat does that mean?â Muir asked.
âThat means whatever it takes,â the president said.
However, thereâs something to the tail end of that. Muir asked about a special carveout of the filibuster, and President Biden noted yes if itâs the last resort.
âI donât think we may have to go that far,â the president said, âbut I would be if thatâs, if itâs â the only thing standing between getting voting rights legislation passed and not getting passed is the filibuster, I support making the exception of voting rights for the filibuster.â
Well, President, we are in the last resort scenario. You will not get 60 votes. Senate Republicans will never vote to approve it, and Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona have opposed doing away with the filibuster. So, the only way forward is a carveout if you donât do away with the whole thing.
Sunday, on CBS Newsâ âFace the Nation,â Vice President Harris stated that democracy itself would be at risk if voting rights legislation werenât passed in the U.S.
From USA Today:Â
âWe have been a role model saying, âYou can see this and aspire to this and reject autocracies and autocratic leadership,ââ Harris said. âRight now, weâre about to take ourselves off the map as a role model if we let people destroy one of the most important pillars of a democracy, which is free and fair elections.â
Vice President Harris also conceded that this issue might not be at the forefront of peopleâs attention at the moment. Nevertheless, itâs an urgent matter.
âGiven the daily grind that people are facing, this may not feel like an immediate or urgent matter, when in fact it is,â the vice president said. âAnd the more we have the opportunity to talk about it, the more I think people will see, âYeah, I donât want an America of the future for my kids to be in an America where we ⊠are suppressing the right of the American people to vote.ââ
Listen. Indeed, people are rightfully worried about another surge of COVID, lack of testing, and the instability that sickness will bring. But, they also can focus on different things at one time. A record amount of people voted during the 2020 election where there were no vaccines available. Most in part because things like mail-in voting were widely available. We donât know how the pandemic will look in the fall when midterms come around. There needs to be options and protections for everyone to get a fair shot in choosing the candidate they think best serves them.
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