Leadership Conference On Civil And Human Rights And 53 Other Groups, Including Democracy 21, Urge Congress To Remain Focused On The Fight For Voting Rights
Reforms to the Electoral Count Act (ECA) are “needed and welcome, but they simply are not adequate to meet the current moment.”
As Congress considers the next steps in the fight to move voting rights forward, The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, a coalition of more than 230 national organizations, and 53 individual groups, including Democracy 21, today urged Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and the Members of Congress who supported voting rights legislation “to remain extremely focused in the weeks ahead on the core issue of racial discrimination in voting.”
In a letter sent today, the groups thanked Majority Leader Schumer for his leadership on the issue. The debate and vote on the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act “mark progress on our journey towards becoming a truly inclusive, multiracial democracy. Yet we have far to go, and we must fight on,” the groups wrote in the letter.
“Voters of color are facing the greatest threat to voting rights since Jim Crow, and this threat is targeted,” the groups wrote. “As civil rights and community leaders have said many times, we cannot out-organize or litigate past attacks on our freedom to vote. Therefore, we must have a legislative solution, and that solution must address racial discrimination head on.”
Conversations “regarding reforms to the Electoral Count Act (ECA) are needed and welcome,” the groups wrote, “but they simply are not adequate to meet the current moment. We should certainly make sure that votes duly cast are reflected in the ultimate presidential count. But we also must address the discriminatory barriers to the ballot that prevent votes from even being cast, or we will retreat and retrench from our aspirations as a multiracial democracy — just as we did after Reconstruction.”
According to Democracy 21 President Fred Wertheimer, “The ECA by itself has no impact on House and Senate races. The ECA does nothing to overturn the numerous state voter suppression and election sabotage laws enacted in 2021, with more coming in 2022. The ECA is in need of repair, but fundamental voting rights must be part of that repair if we are to truly protect our nation’s elections and our democracy.”
The letter urged Majority Leader Schumer to ensure “that any revised legislation also includes components of the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act that are necessary to address the problems faced by eligible voters in their attempts to cast votes and have those votes counted. Further, while seeking narrow reforms that can garner 60 votes is useful, we must continue the conversation — in the Senate and across the country — about the imperative to no longer allow an arcane rule with a racist history to block urgently needed protections for the freedom to vote.”
Read the full letter here or below.
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February 2, 2022
Dear Majority Leader Schumer:
Re: We Must Remain Focused on the Fight Against Racial Discrimination in Voting
On behalf of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, a coalition of more than 230 national organizations committed to promoting and protecting the civil and human rights of all persons in the United States, and the 53 undersigned organizations, we write to thank you for your leadership — and your colleagues’ support both in the House and Senate — in pushing forward critical federal voting rights protections, and to urge you to remain extremely focused in the weeks ahead on the core issue of racial discrimination in voting.
First, we want to acknowledge and commend your steadfast leadership in pushing the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act to the Senate floor. We thank you for using every tool at your disposal to secure a substantive, public debate among U.S. senators on critical federal voting rights protections — the first to occur since the Shelby County v. Holder decision gutted the Voting Rights Act nearly nine years ago.
We also deeply appreciate your decision to call a vote on whether to allow an often-amended procedural rule to stand in the way of the voting rights protections that voters of color need and deserve — forcing each U.S. senator to make a legacy-defining choice and showing the nation who is on the right side of history. Several senators spoke eloquently and passionately about the current existential threats to our democracy and Congress’s urgent constitutional responsibility to meet these threats with federal legislation.
This debate and vote mark progress on our journey towards becoming a truly inclusive, multiracial democracy. Yet we have far to go, and we must fight on. As John Lewis said: “Never give up, never give in, never give out.” We know that you and your colleagues are actively considering what comes next for voting rights and pro-democracy reforms in the Senate. We appreciate your commitment to keeping the Senate and the nation laser-focused on this issue in the coming weeks despite a challenging Senate calendar. This is simply too important to move past.
As you consider next steps, we urge you to remain focused on the urgent threat of racial discrimination in voting. People of color made their voices heard in record numbers in the 2020 election, and the result has been a swift and sustained backlash to ensure that they can never again exercise their full voice and power. Voters of color are facing the greatest threat to voting rights since Jim Crow, and this threat is targeted. From questions about the vote count in communities of color to the January 6th insurrection — just one day after Georgia elected its first Black and Jewish U.S. senators — to the rash of voter suppression laws in the states, including efforts to replace nonpartisan election officials especially in communities of color, the urgent threats to our democracy are rooted in racism. As civil rights and community leaders have said many times, we cannot out-organize or litigate past attacks on our freedom to vote. Therefore, we must have a legislative solution, and that solution must address racial discrimination head on.
The conversations regarding reforms to the Electoral Count Act (ECA) are needed and welcome, but they simply are not adequate to meet the current moment. We should certainly make sure that votes duly cast are reflected in the ultimate presidential count. But we also must address the discriminatory barriers to the ballot that prevent votes from even being cast, or we will retreat and retrench from our aspirations as a multiracial democracy — just as we did after Reconstruction.
Moreover, we must ensure that any revised legislation also includes components of the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act that are necessary to address the problems faced by eligible voters in their attempts to cast votes and have those votes counted. Further, while seeking narrow reforms that can garner 60 votes is useful, we must continue the conversation — in the Senate and across the country — about the imperative to no longer allow an arcane rule with a racist history to block urgently needed protections for the freedom to vote.
Thank you again for your tremendous leadership, and we look forward to working with you to ensure that the U.S. Senate fulfills its constitutional responsibility to protect and preserve the freedom to vote. If you have any questions or need additional information, please contact Jesselyn McCurdy, executive vice president of The Leadership Conference, at mccurdy@civilrights.org.
Sincerely,
The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
ACCESS
A. Philip Randolph Institute
AFL-CIO
Alliance for Youth Action
American Civil Liberties Union
American Federation of Teachers
American Humanist Association
Americans for Democratic Action (ADA)
Asian Americans Advancing Justice – AAJC
Asian and Pacific Islander American Vote (APIAVote)
Autistic Self Advocacy Network
Bend the Arc: Jewish Action
Brennan Center for Justice
Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP)
Clearinghouse on Women’s Issues
Common Cause
DemCast USA
Democracy 21
Democracy Initiative
Demos
End Citizens United / Let America Vote Action Fund
Fair Fight Action
Feminist Majority Foundation
GLSEN
Human Rights Campaign
Labor Council for Latin American Advancement
Lambda Legal
League of Conservation Voters
League of Women Voters of the United States
NAACP
NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF)
National Action Network
National Alliance for Partnerships in Equity
National Association of Social Workers
National Black Justice Coalition
National CAPACD – National Coalition for Asian Pacific American Community Development
National Council of Jewish Women
National Council of Negro Women
National Fair Housing Alliance
New Georgia Project Action Fund
Our Vote Texas
Oxfam America
People For the American Way
PFLAG National
Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights
SEIU
Sojourners
Southern Poverty Law Center
State Voices
The Andrew Goodman Foundation
The Arc of the U.S.
The League of Women Voters of the United States
Voter Participation Center
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