Fellow Democrats sink Biden's hopes to save voting, election bills

President Biden says he's "not sure" major elections and voting rights bills can pass Congress this year after fellow Democrat Kyrsten Sinema refuses to go along with changing Senate rules to muscle the bill past a Republican filibuster.

Biden had come to the Capitol to prod Democratic senators in a closed-door meeting, but he was not optimistic when he emerged.
Reuters

Biden had come to the Capitol to prod Democratic senators in a closed-door meeting, but he was not optimistic when he emerged.

US Senator Kyrsten Sinema has rejected President Joe Biden's plea to jettison the Senate's filibuster rule to allow Democrats to pass a voting-rights bill, all but ensuring the bill's failure.

Sinema on Thursday called the measure a critical tool to tamp down the nation's deepening political divisions, while fellow centrist Democratic Senator Joe Manchin said removing the guardrail would allow simple majorities to ram through extreme legislation.

Sinema took to the Senate floor to reiterate her opposition shortly before Biden met with fellow Democrats in the Senate to urge them to unite around the idea and pass a law he said was critical to offsetting a wave of new restrictions on ballot access passed in Republican-led states.

She blasted the wave of new laws restricting ballot access in Republican-led states as undemocratic, but said she would not agree to change the Senate's rules to pass a federal law countering them.

"I will not support separate actions that worsen the underlying disease of division in our country," Sinema said. "Some have given up on the goal of easing our divisions and uniting Americans. I have not."

READ MORE: Biden backs Senate rule change to pass minority voting rights bills

Biden acknowledges bills may not succeed

After the meeting, Biden acknowledged that the bill might not succeed due to the pair's opposition to the rule change.

"The honest to God answer is I don’t know whether we can get this done," Biden said. He told reporters, his voice rising, "As long as I'm in the White House, as long as I'm engaged at all, I'm going to be fighting."

Manchin later reiterated his opposition to the move, saying, "Ending the filibuster would be the easy way out."

The chamber's 50 Republicans are united in opposition to the voting-rights reform bill, which they dismiss as a partisan power grab. Democrats need all 50 of their votes in the upper chamber to agree to change the filibuster.

Sinema said that previous changes to the filibuster proved to be mistakes.

"These shortsighted actions by both parties have led to our current American judiciary and Supreme Court, which as I stand here today is considering questions regarding fundamental rights Americans have enjoyed for decades," Sinema said.

READ MORE: NYC's new law allows non-citizens to vote in local elections

'Act of political courage'

Democrats in 2013 eliminated the 60-vote threshold for most administration nominees, and Republicans followed up in 2017 and did the same thing for Supreme Court nominees. 

That cleared the way for then Republican president Donald Trump to name three conservatives to the court in his four years in office, establishing a 6-3 majority.

Sinema's speech was attended by more Republican senators than those of her own party.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who was present on the floor for her speech, told reporters afterwards that it was "extraordinarily important" and said that Sinema's "act of political courage" had "saved the Senate as an institution."

READ MORE: Biden sees US democracy threatened by Republican 'subversion'

Route 6