Finalmente,
Congress passed the Voting Rights Act of 1965,
preventing discrimination at the ballot box and including specific provisions that protected voters in the South -— many of the same voters who were beaten and bloodied when trying to exercise their rights in the years prior.
But in 2013,
the US Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act in Shelby County v. Holder,
which allowed states to once again create obstacles for voters and paved the way for a new era of Jim Crow voter-suppression tactics.
Legislation to suppress the vote continues to gain traction around the country,
led by Republicans in state houses who are unhappy with last November’s election results.
But let’s be clear about what American saw last November — record voter turnout,
not voter fraud.
If America wants to promote democracy around the world, it must set the example and ensure that all citizens have the right to vote.
As my father would have, I will continue to use my voice to call for what is right, what is just and what is equitable.
To bring back the safeguards that my father spent his life fighting for,
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer must bring voting rights legislation to the US Senate floor for a vote.
And the procedural hurdle standing in the way of passage — the filibuster — must be removed.
While the US House of Representatives can pass a bill with a simple majority,
the 100-member Senate generally requires 60
votes. sin embargo,
in this political climate,
getting 60
votes seems close to impossible — and so eliminating the filibuster would mean the bill would only need a simple majority for the Senate to pass.
The filibuster has historically been used as a tool to try to keep segregationist policies in place.
In the 1920s, eso
was employed to stop anti-lynching legislation from moving forward.
In the 1950s, Su.
Strom Thurmond of South Carolina famously held the longest filibuster on record to delay,
unsuccessfully,
civil rights measures.
And in a failed effort to block the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
southern segregationists filibustered the bill for 60
working days.
It is long past time that we stop using the filibuster to greenlight racist policies.
los
John Lewis Voting Rights Act y el
For The People Act stand ready for US Senate action and will help to restore faith in America’s democracy.
The John Lewis Voting Rights Act would restore the Voting Rights Act of 1965
and ensure that states are not employing voting measures that are discriminatory and deny citizens the right to vote. Además,
the For the People Act would make voting and voter registration easier and more secure,
and take big money and influence out of politics.
If there was ever a time to eliminate the filibuster, it is now.
Voters knew how high the stakes were when they went to the ballot box in November,
and then again when Georgians came out in record numbers in January for the runoff that decided control of the Senate.
A majority of Americans elected Democrats,
and it is time that these elected officials take a firm stance on America’s democratic values and principles by ensuring that we all have the right to vote.
Even today,
my father’s words ring true: “
So long as I do not firmly and irrevocably possess the right to vote I do not possess myself.
I cannot make up my mind — it is made up for me.
I cannot live as a democratic citizen,
observing the laws I have helped to enact —
I can only submit to the edict of others.”