The liberty principle for this Freedom Friday is that every eligible American citizen has a right to vote – one person equals one vote. Democrats do not seem to like this principle because they use every tactic in their power to give non-citizens, dead people, felons, etc. the right to vote. Their latest scheme is to take the constitutional control of elections from the states and give it to Washington, D.C.
The first hearing on the Democrat’s legislation
to nationalize elections was held on Wednesday. Part of the legislation calls
for eliminating voter identification and most other state election safeguards.
Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) denounced the legislation and said that it should be
called the Corrupt Politicians Act because its main purpose is to keep corrupt
politicians in office.
Democrats claim that Republicans are “afraid
of democracy” and that voter fraud “simply doesn’t exist.” Democrats know that
both statements are false. The proposed bill would legalize ballot harvesting
nationwide, establish same-day voter registration, transfer the authority to
draw congressional districts from state legislatures to unelected bureaucrats,
and more. Fred Lucas wrote about nine highlights from the hearing on the
federal takeover of elections.
1. Mao and Maduro
Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., compared
congressional Democrats’ bill to the Nicolas Maduro regime in Venezuela and Mao
Zedong in China, saying they would change the rules to cling to power….
2. Eric Holder: Voter Fraud “Simply Doesn’t
Exist.”
… “There is a large and powerful faction
in this country intent on retaining power, and who will bend or break the rules
of our democracy in order to do so,” Holder testified, adding:
“The attack on our system of government
did not begin nor end with the insurrection at our Capitol on Jan. 6. For years
now, politicians have spread the same lies about voter fraud and expressed
falsehoods about the integrity of our electoral system. The fact is, there is
no evidence of widespread or systemic fraud during the 2020 election or at any
other time.”
Hold identified an “undemocratic trinity”
of issues as “gerrymandering, voter suppression, [and] dark money.” He said
Democrats’ bill would “get rid of all of them at once.” …
3. Schumer, McConnell, and “Shame”
Demonstrating the significance of the
legislation, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell,
R-Ky., each dropped by the opening of the hearing to deliver their own remarks….
[Schumer said] “Republican state
legislatures have seized on the former president’s big lie that the election
was stolen and introduced more than 26 bills in 43 states aimed at tightening
voting rules under the guise of election integrity.” …
The New York Democrat cited proposals in
Iowa, Wisconsin, Arizona, and Georgia that he characterized as voter
suppression.
“This is one of the most despicable things
I’ve seen in all my years. Shame, shame, shame,” the majority leader said…
McConnell dismissed Schumer’s claim of a
vast voter suppression effort….
McConnell said Democrats’ legislation
would create an “implementation nightmare” for local election officials.
“This legislation would forcibly rewrite
election laws in all 50 states from here in Washington,” McConnell said,
adding:
“Popular policies like voter ID would be
banned unless states neutered with loopholes. Meanwhile, unpopular, and absurd
practices like ballot harvesting – where paid political operatives can show up
carrying stacks of other people’s ballots – would not just be allowed, it would
be mandatory….
4. Ted Cruz: “Keep Corrupt Politicians in Office.”
Cruz called the legislation a “brazen and
shameless power grab by Democrats.” He referred to it as the “Corrupt Politicians
Act,” a phrase also popular on Twitter.
“Under this bill [called For the People
Act], there is automatic registration of anybody, if you get a driver’s
license, if you get a welfare payment, if you get an unemployment payment, if
you attend a public university,” Cruz said. “Everyone knows there are millions
of illegal aliens who have driver’s licenses, who are getting welfare benefits,
who attend public universities. This bill is designed to register everyone of
those illegal aliens.” …
5. Opposition to Voter ID Is “Racist.”
During [an] exchange with Cruz, [Indiana
Attorney General Todd] Rokita noted the effectiveness of Indiana’s voter ID law
and said Indiana is a national model.
“In Indiana, we had the country’s first
phot ID law; voter turnout went up, and it went up because more people had confidence
in the process,” Rokita said. “In fact, when others on this panel and other
places say that a certain subset of our country or our electorate can’t vote
with photo ID, that’s really a racist statement.” …
6. Taxpayer
Funding for Politicians?
Although
the public campaign financing portion of the bill, numbered as S1, provides $6
in government funds to federal candidates for every $1 raised in private donations,
some supporters insist that money wouldn’t be taxpayer money….
7. “Absolutely
Eliminate.”
Although
the legislation would expand same-day voter registration and allow felon voting
and other procedures that Democrats contend enfranchise more voters, some
voters would lose access, [Marc] Warner, West Virginia’s secretary of state,
told the Senate panel. [Voters who would lose access are members of the
military stationed overseas and voters with certain disabilities.]
8. Cleaning
Voter Rolls and Suppression
Early in
the hearing, Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., the ranking member of the Rules and
Administration Committee, asked Michael Waldman, president of the Brennan
Center for Justice, whether state laws using Social Security information to
identify dead people would be considered voter suppression….
Blunt
followed up: “Just on the question I asked, why would that bill, removing dead
people from the voter rolls based on Social Security information, be voter
suppression?” …
But Blunt
noted a contradiction in Waldman’s support of Democrats’ legislation. So, your
view would be, the federal government is not capable of telling the state which
Social Security recipients died and no longer get a check,” Blunt said. “So, we
should turn the entire election over to a federal structure? I just don’t
agree.” …
9. “Remember
the Sabbath.”
During
Schumer’s remarks, he sharply criticized the Georgia Legislature for eliminating
early voting on Sunday.
“The most
reprehensible effort of all might be found in Georgia, where Republicans
recently passed a bill to eliminate early voting on Sunday – on Sunday – the day
when many church-going African Americans participate in voter drives known as
Souls to the Polls,” the Senate majority leader said.
“What an
astonishing coincidence. I’d like one of the Republican members on this
committee to give us a plain sense justification for that restriction,” Schumer
said, adding: “Monday through Saturday, legitimate voters show up, but Sunday
is voter fraud day. Give me a break.”
Later in
the hearing, Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith, R-Miss., offered a justification for not
allowing voting on Sunday.
“I cannot
speak for Georgia, but I can speak for Mississippi on why we would never do
that on a Sunday or hold an election on a Sunday,” Hyde-Smith said, before
holding up a dollar bill.
She said,
referring to the national motto:
“This is a
dollar bill. This says, ‘The United States of America … In God We Trust.’
Etched in stone in the U.S. Senate chamber is ‘In God We Trust.’
“When you
swore in all of these witnesses, the last thing you said to them, your
instructions, was ‘so help you God.’ In God’s word, in Exodus 20:18, it says: ‘Remember
the sabbath and keep it holy.’ That is my response to Sen. Schumer.”
No comments:
Post a Comment