Senate

Senate Democrats to meet with Texas lawmakers on voting rights

Senate Democrats will meet Tuesday with lawmakers from the Texas state legislature to discuss voting rights.

The meeting, which will take place during a closed-door caucus lunch, comes as Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) is planning to hold a vote next week on a sweeping bill to overhaul elections.

“Texas is only the most recent flashpoint in the nationwide effort by Republican legislators to contract Americans’ right to vote as you well know. … The tide of Republican voter suppression laws is a direct assault on our democracy and could disenfranchise tens of millions of Americans. Today I’m proud to say at the Democratic caucus lunch, we will host a group of Texas Democrats,” Schumer said on the Senate floor Tuesday morning.

Schumer added that the discussion would focus on “how to come together to protect voting rights.”

The fight in Texas jumped into the national spotlight late last month when Democratic state lawmakers staged a walkout as part of an effort to stop a bill that would have placed new restrictions on voting. It’s unclear how permanent their victory is, however, with Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) pledging to call a special session on election changes.

The group of Texas Democrats is in Washington this week to discuss voting rights, and will meet separately with Vice President Harris.

Democrats view passing voting legislation as a top priority as state legislatures around the country have introduced, debated and, in some cases, passed bills that would place new rules on voting, with many of those focused on mail-in voting or voter ID.

But they face headaches from within their own ranks on getting anything to President Biden’s desk.

The House has already passed a sweeping bill that would overhaul federal elections, known as the For the People Act. Senate Democrats are expected to vote on the bill next week, though they are mulling potential changes to shore up support. 

But to get a bill through the Senate, they would either need 60 votes or to nix the filibuster, something they don’t currently have the support to do. And Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) has said that he doesn’t support the For the People Act, also known as H.R. 1 or S. 1, as it’s currently written.

In addition to describing it as too broad, he’s also bristled at the fact that it doesn’t have Republican support, a red line that has infuriated progressives.