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Tuesday, June 1, 2021

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But Biden has no path to passing either bill as it stands. Moderate senators like West Virginia's Joe Manchin and Arizona's Kyrsten Sinema oppose abolishing or amending the Senate filibuster tradition that means such measures need a 60 vote supermajority to usher legislation into law. Manchin is backing the John Lewis bill -- that restores provisions of the Voting Rights Act that require states to get a federal sign-off before changing their voting laws that were gutted by the Supreme Court. But that measure alone would not allow Democrats to fully counter the multitude of election laws in the states. And even with the support of a few Republican senators, it would still likely fall foul of the filibuster.
 
"It would require Senators Manchin and Sinema to change their mind," California Democratic Rep. Ted Lieu said on CNN "Newsroom" on Monday.
"Hopefully when they see Republicans continue to obstruct all their legislation that it's going to move America forward such as the January 6 commission that they will, in fact, change their mind and allow the filibuster to be modified, especially for something as critical as voting rights."
Some Democrats may see hope in the fact that Manchin was angry and disappointed that Republicans used the filibuster to kill off the bipartisan January 6 commission. But he has so far given no indication that he will temper his desire for bipartisan action.

How the battle against restrictive voting weighs on Biden's Washington agenda

More evidence of Republican efforts to build on Trump's election fraud lies are causing some Democrats to wonder how much longer it will be politically feasible for Biden to pursue deals with a Republican Party that appears bent on locking them out of power.
Most immediately this is playing out in the President's elongated effort to find a deal with Republicans on a bipartisan infrastructure package. The effort is critical to Biden's vow to voters to show that despite fearsome political divides, America's leaders can unify in a bipartisan manner to provide for the common good.

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