Joe Biden

Statement on Voting Rights Restrictions in Georgia

March 26, 2021

More Americans voted in the 2020 elections than any election in our Nation's history. In Georgia we saw this most historic demonstration of the power of the vote twice: in November and then again in the runoff election for the U.S. Senate seats in January. Recount after recount and court case after court case upheld the integrity and outcome of a clearly free, fair, and secure democratic process.

Yet, instead of celebrating the rights of all Georgians to vote or winning campaigns on the merits of their ideas, Republicans in the State instead rushed through an un-American law to deny people the right to vote. This law, like so many others being pursued by Republicans in statehouses across the country is a blatant attack on the Constitution and good conscience. Among the outrageous parts of this new State law, it ends voting hours early so working people can't cast their vote after their shift is over. It adds rigid restrictions on casting absentee ballots that will effectively deny the right to vote to countless voters. And it makes it a crime to provide water to voters while they wait in line—lines Republican officials themselves have created by reducing the number of polling sites across the State, disproportionately in Black neighborhoods.

This is Jim Crow in the 21st century. It must end. We have a moral and Constitutional obligation to act. I once again urge Congress to pass the For the People Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act to make it easier for all eligible Americans access the ballot box and prevent attacks on the sacred right to vote. And I will take my case to the American people, including Republicans who joined the broadest coalition of voters ever in this past election to put country before party.

If you have the best ideas, you have nothing to hide. Let the people vote.

NOTE: The statement referred to H.R. 1.

Joseph R. Biden, Statement on Voting Rights Restrictions in Georgia Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/348979

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