Democrats Demand ID To Get Into Their Convention But Not To Vote For President
Individuals seeking to get into the DNC must show proof of identity 'for security screening' to pass through a security perimeter.
President Joe Biden on Tuesday castigated Republicans for supporting popular election security reforms with a hyperbolic stream of invective accusing his opponents of subverting elections, of posing a "dangerous" threat to democracy, and generally being "un-American."
"We are facing the most significant test of our democracy since the Civil War. That's not hyperbole," Biden said, speaking at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia.
The president spoke partly to condemn his predecessor Donald Trump's refusal to accept the results of the 2020 presidential election, partly to criticize Republican-controlled states like Georgia and Texas for passing election security bills, and partly to rally support for the For the People Act — federal voting legislation supported by Democrats that would weaken state voter ID requirements and override other Republican reforms at the state level.
The president made no mention of the Senate filibuster or the fact that the Democrats lack the 60 votes needed to overcome opposition to the major pieces of his agenda, including voting reforms. Instead, Biden used the bully pulpit of the presidency to paint concerns over election security as conspiratorial and supportive of a broad attack on democracy itself.
"The 2020 election was the most scrutinized election ever in American history. Challenge after challenge brought to local, state and election officials, state legislatures, state and federal courts, even to the United States Supreme Court not once, but twice. More than 80 judges, including those appointed by my predecessor, heard the arguments. In every case neither cause nor evidence was found to undermine the national achievement of administering the historic election in the face of such extraordinary challenges," Biden said.
"The Big Lie is just that: A big lie," he declared, referring to Trump's claims that the election was fraudulent and that Biden's victory was illegitimate.
"In America, if you lose, you accept the results, you follow the Constitution. You try again. You don't call facts fake and then try to bring down the American experiment just because you're unhappy. That's not statesmanship – that's selfishness," Biden said.
Biden tied Republican opposition to the For the People Act with historic efforts to deny black Americans and women the right to vote. He cast the Democratic voting bill as an antidote that would "end voter suppression in states." And he predicted that Republicans would launch "a new wave of unprecedented voter suppression and raw and sustained election subversion" ahead of the 2022 midterm elections, calling on Congress to act now.
The president said that a recent Supreme Court decision upholding two controversial election reforms in Arizona "does not limit the Congress' ability to repair the damage done."
He went on to slam election laws like those passed in Georgia and Texas, calling them "racist and discriminatory."
Biden accused Texas Republicans, for example, of wanting "partisan poll workers" to intimidate voters.
"They want voters to drive further" and "wait longer to vote," he claimed, repeating falsehoods about the Texas law. He made the incredible and unsubstantiated claim that Republicans "want the ability to reject the final count and ignore the will of the people if their preferred candidate loses," comparing the actions of Trump-supporting Republicans to those of autocracies around the world.
He further called 28 Republican voting measures enacted across 17 states a "21st century Jim Crow assault."
Even as Biden launched explicitly partisan attacks against his opposition, he sought to portray Democratic efforts to undo GOP election reforms as a bipartisan cause.
"We'll be asking my Republican friends in Congress and states and cities and counties to stand up for God sake and help prevent this concerted effort to undermine our election and the sacred right to vote," Biden said.
"Have you no shame?" he demanded of Republicans.
"This isn't about Democrats or Republicans. It's literally about who we are as Americans. It's that basic. It's about the kind of country we want today."
Closing, the president said Republicans are leading "an unfolding assault taking place in America today, an attempt to suppress and subvert the right to vote in fair and free elections. An assault on democracy. An assault on liberty. An assault on who we are."
It was a starkly divisive speech from a president who aspired to unite the country.
Reacting, the Republican National Committee dismissed Biden's speech as "lies and theatrics."
"After Democrats failed to pass their federal takeover of our elections (H.R.1), Biden is continuing their dishonest attacks on commonsense election integrity efforts," said RNC spokeswoman Danielle Alvarez. "Meanwhile, Republicans are engaged in state-led efforts to make it easier to vote and harder to cheat, and polling shows Americans overwhelmingly support these laws."
Statement from RNC Communications Director Danielle Álvarez on Biden’s Philadelphia speech: https://t.co/BnkfXoFSRs
— Philip Melanchthon Wegmann (@PhilipWegmann) 1626203758.0
The president's remarks are the beginning of a major messaging effort by the administration to attack Republican election reforms and rally support for Democrats ahead of the 2022 midterm elections. However, Biden's strategy of using a public pressure campaign betrays the reality that even with full control of government, Democrats do not have enough support among their own members to go nuclear and steamroll the minority.
Outspoken moderates like Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) may attract public scorn from progressive activists for being opposed to abolishing the filibuster, but there are more than a handful of Senate Democrats who have kept their own opposition quiet. Without their support, Biden's words remain all bark and no bite.
The lieutenant governor of North Carolina, the first black man to hold that office, excoriated arguments from Democrats that compare voter integrity measures such as the new law passed in Georgia to racist voter suppression laws of the Jim Crow south.
On Thursday, Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson (R) testified at a hearing in the House of Representatives titled, "Oversight of the Voting Rights Act: The Evolving Landscape of Voting Discrimination." In his opening remarks, he said it was "insane" and "insulting" for anyone to compare the voter ID laws passed in Georgia and other states to Jim Crow laws that were used to tyrannize black Americans and keep them from voting.
"My people were put in the belly of ships, bound by chains, and endured the middle passage. My people were whipped, beaten, and sold as property. In Reconstruction and throughout Jim Crow, black people were intimidated, harassed, and even killed to keep them from having a voice in government," Robinson told House lawmakers. "Symbols like chains, nooses, and burnt crosses are not just symbols of death, they are symbols of forced and coerced silence.
"The sacrifices of our ancestors so I could have the opportunity to become the first black lieutenant governor of my state, to see a black man sit in the White House, and for millions of us to be leaders in business, athletics, and culture is incredible," he continued.
Turning to the Georgia law, which Democrats have accused of implementing "Jim Crow in 2021" by suppressing the minority vote, Robinson demanded to know how black voices were being silenced or kept out of the political process.
"How? By fear of a noose or chains? To be fired from work? To be ostracized by their communities? No. A free ID to vote. Let me say that again, a free ID to vote," he said.
He continued:
How absolutely preposterous. Am I to believe that black Americans who have overcome the atrocities of slavery, who were victorious in the civil rights movement, and who now sit in the highest levels of government cannot figure out how to get a free ID to vote?
That we need to be coddled by politicians because they don't think we can figure out how to make our voices heard? Are you kidding me!?
The notion that black people must be protected from a Free ID to vote is not just insane, it's insulting.
📺 MUST WATCH: North Carolina Lt. Gov. @MarkRobinsonNC destroys the Left's narrative on voter discrimination and ele… https://t.co/ZHOlmquDlD— House Judiciary GOP (@House Judiciary GOP)1619099871.0
Later in the hearing, Robinson made it clear that historically it was the Republican Party that supported voting rights for black Americans and the Democratic Party that supported voter suppression and Jim Crow.
"That history is clear who stood on which side at every turn in history. It is clear, it's not even in dispute," Robinson said. "What we want is integrity, we don't want power. We want integrity."
He also defended Republican-supported voter ID laws as "simple American responsibility" and reminded the Congress that Jim Crow laws "wasn't just a poll tax."
"You stepped outside the line during Jim Crow, you'd find yourself swinging from a tree," he said.
“Requiring an ID to vote is just simple American responsibility.”Watch here as @MarkRobinsonNC exposes everything… https://t.co/u6lrJfrmRI— Rep. Dan Bishop (@Rep. Dan Bishop)1619105916.0
Robinson called voter ID "common sense legislation for the common good."
"To say that somehow poor people, black people can't be involved in that responsibility, again, is insulting," he said.
Rep. Burgess Owens (R-Utah) on Tuesday shamed President Joe Biden and the Democratic Party for their "absolutely outrageous" comparison of Georgia's new election law to Jim Crow laws of the old segregationist South.
"I grew up in the era of actual, legalized, institutional racism. I grew up in the deep South in Tallahassee, Florida, in the 1960s during the days of KKK, Jim Crow, and segregation," Owens testified to the Senate Judiciary Committee. "As someone who has actually experienced Jim Crow laws, I'd like to set the record straight on the myths regarding the recently passed Georgia state law and why any comparison between this law and Jim Crow is absolutely outrageous."
The congressman was a witness for the Senate Judiciary Committee's hearing on voting rights titled, "Jim Crow 2021: The Latest Assault on the Right to Vote." The hearing also featured failed Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams — who continues to falsely assert that the 2018 gubernatorial election was stolen — Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), and NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund President Sherrilyn Ifill, each of whom asserted that the Georgia law is part of an ongoing assault by Republicans on the right of black Americans to vote.
Owens strongly disagreed and used his testimony to dispel the idea that Georgia's law is racist or in any way, shape, or form reminiscent of Jim Crow laws.
He told the committee that when he was a child, his father allowed him to join a protest outside a segregated theater where black people were not allowed to enter. He described segregated service stations with restrooms designated for white men, white women, and "colored" people. Owens also referred to Jim Crow laws like poll taxes, property tests, literacy tests, and "violence and intimidation at the polls" that "made it nearly impossible for black Americans to vote" as part of his lived experience.
In contrast, Owens said Georgia's election law simply establishes a new requirement for a person voting absentee to provide a form of voter identification. This requirement, "which has brought so much outrage from the left," is met with an ID card, bank statement, paycheck, government check, utility bill, or any other government documentation with a voter's name and address, Owens explained. He also pointed out that 97% of Georgia voters already have ID and noted that even if voters fail to provide one of those documents, they may still fill out provisional ballots.
"What I find extremely offensive is the narrative from the left that black people are not smart enough, not educated enough, not desirous enough for education to do what every other culture and race does in this country — get an ID," declared Owens.
"True racism is this: It's the projection of the Democratic Party on my proud race. It's called the soft bigotry of low expectations," he continued.
"President Biden said of the Georgia law, 'This is Jim Crow on steroids.' With all due respect, Mr. President, you know better. It is disgusting and offensive to compare the actual voter suppression and violence of that era that we grew up in with a state law that only asks that people show their ID."
Owens accused Democrats of "fearmongering" about Georgia's law and reminded the committee that Jim Crow laws and Ku Klux Klan violence were "initiated by the Democratic Party."
"To call this Jim Crow 2021 is an insult, my friends," he said. "For those who never lived Jim Crow, we are not in Jim Crow."
WATCH Rep. @BurgessOwens blast through the left’s lies about Georgia’s election integrity lawLive:… https://t.co/le4tOqU4Zx— The Daily Signal (@The Daily Signal)1618935384.0