CONGRESS
House passes sweeping bill on election,
government reforms
The measure would require states to provide same-day
voter registration, to allow at least two weeks of early voting and to offer
drop boxes for ballots.
By SARAH
FERRIS
03/03/2021
11:14 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/03/03/government-election-house-reforms-473545
The House
on Wednesday approved a sweeping package of election and government reforms,
amplifying the issue of voting rights amid a contentious national debate in the
wake of the November elections.
Nearly
every Democrat voted for the bill, which includes a slew of ballot access,
campaign finance and ethics reforms that came under renewed scrutiny after four
years of the Trump administration. It would also require states to provide
same-day voter registration, to allow at least two weeks of early voting and to
offer drop boxes for ballots — some of the same measures that Republicans are
trying to roll back in statehouses across the country.
“This
reminds me of what it must have felt like at Valley Forge,” Speaker Nancy
Pelosi said at a news appearance on the steps of the Capitol earlier Wednesday.
“Everything is at stake. We must win this race, this fight for this bill.”
“At the
same time as we are gathering here to honor our democracy, across the country
over 200 bills are being put together, provisions they’re putting forward, to
suppress the vote,” Pelosi said.
The measure
passed 220-210.
House
Democrats passed a nearly identical bill, led by Rep. John Sarbanes (D-Md.),
shortly after seizing back control of the chamber in 2019. No Republicans voted
for the bill then.
This year’s
passage was more complicated for Pelosi and her leadership team, with just a
four-vote margin. Earlier this week, a group of moderates negotiated changes to
one aspect of the bill — the public financing of elections — after facing
intense criticism in their districts, in part because of a barrage of GOP attack
ads that falsely claimed taxpayer funds would be paying for campaigns.
"If
signed into law, H.R. 1 would be the greatest expansion of the federal
government's role in our elections than we have ever seen," Rep. Rodney
Davis (R-Ill.) said.
Democratic
leaders also worked with senior members of the Congressional Black Caucus to
resolve concerns over a redistricting provision. With concern about a state
mandate to establish independent commissions on redistricting, Democrats
ultimately agreed to provide more flexibility to states in the current round of
redistricting, while still requiring that states meet certain standards to
prevent extreme partisan gerrymandering.
The Senate,
now in Democratic control, is expected to take up the bill, which will force
Republicans — particularly those up for reelection in 2022 — on the record on
the issue.
The bill,
dubbed H.R. 1, is the first of multiple voting rights bills the House will
consider this year. The House also plans to approve a bill, named for the late
civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis, that would restore key parts of the landmark
voting measure of 1965. Both bills’ fates are uncertain in the Senate, where
they would require GOP votes.


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