Senate
Panel Unanimously Approves Bipartisan Bill,
Leahy Statement On Voting Rights Act Reauthorization
WASHINGTON (Wednesday, July 19) –
The Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously reported out
Wednesday the
Fannie Lou Hamer, Rosa Parks, Coretta Scott King and
Cesar E. Chavez Voting Rights Act Reauthorization Act of 2006.
All 18 senators on the panel – Democrat and Republican –
supported the bill. The House passed its bill last week.
Senator Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., the ranking Democratic member of
the panel, is an original co-sponsor of the Senate bill. The
bill now moves to the Senate floor for action, which could occur
as early as this week. Leahy’s statement follows.
Opening
Statement Of Sen. Patrick Leahy
Ranking Member, Committee On The Judiciary,
Executive Business Meeting
July 19, 2006
I thank the Chairman
for agreeing to my suggestion to meet today in a special session
to consider our bipartisan, bicameral legislation to reauthorize
the Voting Rights Act. Our bill is cosponsored by the
Republican and Democratic leaders, by a bipartisan majority of
this Committee and by a bipartisan majority of the Senate.
Our bill, S. 2703 is
named for three civil rights leaders. Fannie Lou Hamer was a
courageous advocate for the right to vote. She nearly gave her
life to secure the right to vote for all Americans. Coretta
Scott King was a tenacious fighter for equality through the
Civil Rights movement in the 1960s and up to her recent passing
earlier this year. Everyone on this Committee can remember when
less than a year ago, the body of Rosa Parks lay in state in the
Capitol across the street, the first African-American woman so
honored. Rosa Parks’ dignified refusal to be treated as a
second class citizen sparked the
Montgomery bus
boycotts that is often cited as the symbolic beginning of the
modern civil rights movement.
Senator Salzar made
what I believe is a good suggestion that I hope will be
universally accepted. He suggested that we include an Hispanic
civil rights leader in the naming of the bill, as well. On his
behalf I will be prepared to ask that the name of Cesar Chavez
be added to the name of our Senate bill.
The Voting Rights
Act is the cornerstone of our civil rights laws. We honor these
leaders, people of vision and strength, and those who died
fighting with them by ensuring that their struggles are not
forsaken, and not forgotten. We honor their legacy by
reaffirming our commitment to protect the right to vote for all
Americans.
Reauthorizing and
restoring the Voting Rights Act is the right thing to do, not
only for those who came before us, the brave people who fought
for equality during the second reconstruction, but also for
those who come after us, our children and our grandchildren. No
one’s right to vote should be abridged, suppressed or denied in
the
United States of America.
Last week, after
months of work, the House of Representatives, led by Congressmen
John Conyers, Mel Watt, John Lewis and Chairman Sensenbrenner,
rejected all efforts to reduce the sweep and effect of the
Voting Rights Act. We are fortunate to have on this Committee
both Senators from the
Badger State, both strong cosponsors
of the bill. I commend the senior Senator, Senator Kohl, for
his active support and leadership. He is a Senator universally
known and respected as a man of ultimate fairness. I also thank
Senator Feingold, the Ranking Member of the
Constitution Subcommittee, for his characteristic diligence and
principled action.
As Congressman John
Lewis said, “When historians pick up their pens and write about
this period, let it be said that those of us in the Congress in
2006, we did the right thing. And our forefathers and our
foremothers would be very proud of us. Let us pass a clean bill
without any amendments.” Our bill passed the House of
Representatives with 390 votes in favor after it rejected all
four amendments offered there. I congratulate our House
cosponsors on their successful efforts and hope that we can
repeat them here in the Senate.
On May 2nd,
our congressional leadership joined together on the steps of the
Capitol to announce a bipartisan and bicameral introduction of
the Voting Rights Act, it was an historic announcement and an
occasion almost unprecedented during the last
5 years of
partisanship.
Over the last four
months this Committee has held 9 hearings into aspects of these
matters and on the bill itself. In another indication of
bipartisanship, those hearings have been chaired by a large
number of Members of this Committee, including both Republicans
and Democrats. No one can say that they hearings were not
fairly conducted.
After almost a month to prepare
for this markup, it is time for us to act. We have less than
two dozen legislative days left in this session of Congress.
The House of Representatives delayed consideration of the Voting
Rights Act for a month due to Republican recalcitrance. We hope
not to suffer the same delay. It is time for us to debate,
consider and vote on this important legislation. We should pass
the bill in the same form as the House so it will go directly to
the President’s desk by the August recess.
We cannot relent in
our fight for the fundamental civil rights of all Americans.
Working together, we should report out a clean, bipartisan
voting rights bill. Congress has reauthorized and revitalized
the Act four times, each time with overwhelmingly bipartisan
support pursuant to its constitutional powers. This is no time
for backsliding, this is the time to move forward together.
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