Biden Rips GOP Election Integrity Laws, Claims They’re ‘Racially Discriminatory’

Biden Rips GOP Election Integrity Laws, Claims They’re ‘Racially Discriminatory’
President Joe Biden speaks at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia on July 13, 2021. Leah Millis/Reuters
Zachary Stieber
Updated:

President Joe Biden on July 13 disparaged laws and proposals that proponents say are aimed at strengthening election security, claiming they’re “racially discriminatory.”

Biden said the election reform bill signed by Georgia’s governor was a “vicious anti-voting law” and claimed Texas Republicans are proposing “to allow partisan poll watchers to intimidate voters and imperil impartial poll workers.”

“This year alone, 17 states have enacted—not just proposed, but enacted—28 new laws to make it harder for Americans to vote, not to mention—and catch this—nearly 400 additional bills Republican members of the state legislatures are trying to pass,” Biden said.

“The 21st century Jim Crow assault is real. It’s unrelenting, and we’re going to challenge it vigorously.”

As auditors in Arizona’s largest county near the end of their work, and shortly after Pennsylvania lawmakers initiated a forensic investigation of the 2020 election in three counties, Biden noted that multiple states have already completed recounts, as well as certain types of audits. He said it wasn’t hyperbole to declare that the election was “the most examined” in the nation’s history.
Biden said solutions to challenges to the vote include legislation—Biden vowed to sign the For the People Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act if Congress passes them—and the hammer of the Department of Justice, which is focusing on making sure voters have access to the polls, scrutinizing audits, and taking legal action such as suing over the new Georgia law.

“We’ve got to shore up our election system and address the threats of election subversion, not just from abroad—which I spent time with [Russian President Vladimir Putin talking about]—but from home,” he said.

The president was speaking from the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia.

A voter, right, shows his identification to a Harris County election clerk before voting in Houston, Texas, on July 14, 2020. (David J. Phillip/AP Photo)
A voter, right, shows his identification to a Harris County election clerk before voting in Houston, Texas, on July 14, 2020. David J. Phillip/AP Photo

Democrats largely oppose any further examination of the 2020 election. Many oppose virtually any election security measures, such as requiring identification, even though some of those measures enjoy broad support from the American public.

Biden and other Democrats have promoted false information about the Georgia law and other election reform proposals. The Georgia law implemented reforms such as limiting the number of drop boxes in a county and requiring that they be placed inside buildings and continually monitored. It also expands early voting and continues to allow no-excuse mail-in voting.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, responded to Biden’s speech by alleging it was part of the president’s “continued assault on election integrity and common-sense measures supported by a wide majority of Americans.”

Texas Rep. Lacey Hull, a Republican, said on July 14 that the bill being protested by Democrats “does not harm voting.”

“This bill will make it easy to vote and hard to cheat,” she said on “Fox & Friends.”

Texas Democrats fled the state to try to prevent the measure’s approval. They could face arrest for doing so.

Biden backed the play, and Vice President Kamala Harris plans to meet with the legislators this week, White House deputy press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters on Air Force One as the president flew to Pennsylvania.

Former President Donald Trump accused Biden of rushing to Pennsylvania to stop the election investigation that state Sen. Doug Mastriano, a Republican, triggered earlier this month.

“Why are they so concerned that a President, who never goes anywhere, would hop onto beautiful Air Force One and head to Philadelphia if it were an honest election?” Trump said in a statement. “Why not let the audit go forward and make everybody, on both sides, happy?”

Zachary Stieber
Zachary Stieber
Senior Reporter
Zachary Stieber is a senior reporter for The Epoch Times based in Maryland. He covers U.S. and world news. Contact Zachary at [email protected]
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