The Morning Dispatch: Republicans Block ‘For the People’ Act With Filibuster

Plus, the Delta variant is on the rise in the United States.

(Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP/Getty Images.)

Happy Wednesday! For a midweek pick-me-up, check out this video of Wander Franco’s dad watching the 20-year-old Tampa Bay Rays’ rookie phenom hit a home run in his first major league game.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • A federal appeals court on Monday issued a stay on U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez’s ruling earlier this month that overturned California’s “assault weapons” ban. The move will allow the state tocontinue enforcing its current gun control regime, at least temporarily.
  • The United States will likely fall short of President Joe Biden’s goal of having 70 percent of American adults at least partially vaccinated by July 4, Jeffrey Zients—head of the White House COVID-19 response team—said yesterday. According to Centers for Disease Control, 65.5 percent of Americans older than 18 have received at least one vaccine dose, and 56 percent are fully vaccinated.
  • The Democrats’ “For the People Act” stalled in the Senate on Tuesday, with Senate Republicans using the legislative filibuster to prevent the legislation—which would fundamentally overhaul how elections are run nationwide—from advancing to debate.
  • Voting in New York City’s mayoral primaries concluded yesterday. Activist and talk show host Curtis Sliwa won the Republican nomination, and former police officer Eric Adams holds an early, substantial lead over Kathryn Garcia and Maya Wiley on the Democratic side—though those results will likely not be finalized for weeks due to the city’s implementation of ranked-choice voting. Erstwhile Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang conceded the race late Tuesday night.
  • The Department of Justice on Tuesday seized more than 30 web domains with ties to the Iranian regime due to concerns the sites were part of an ongoing disinformation and propaganda campaign.
  • The United States confirmed 10,341 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 1.29 percent of the 802,520 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 363 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 602,455. According to the CDC, 12,633 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 647,403 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 177,635,067 Americans having now received at least one dose.

S.1 For the Money, Two for the Show

The “For the People Act”—a Democratic-backed bill that would massively overhaul how elections are run nationwide—did not survive its encounter with the legislative filibuster on Tuesday, with Democrats failing to pick up the 10 Republican needed to reach the 60-vote threshold required to advance the legislation for debate.

Lawmakers and congressional analysts alike knew well before Tuesday’s vote that the legislation would likely fail entirely along partisan lines, and it did exactly that. Still, both sides tried to claim victory: Republicans, for blocking the “dangerous legislation” from advancing; Democrats, for securing Sen. Joe Manchin’s support and presenting a united front.

“We achieved a preliminary part of our strategy, which was to unite the Democrats,” Sen. Brian Schatz, a Democrat from Hawaii, told The Dispatch.

We broke down the contents of the For the People Act in detail back in March, but the legislation is divided into three main sections: Voting rights, campaign finance, and lawmaker ethics.

The first would create a set of federal requirements mandating how states administer their elections, automatically registering eligible citizens to vote, allowing voters to meet voter ID requirements with a “sworn written statement,” establishing Election Day as a national holiday, implementing no-excuse absentee voting, and requiring states to create independent redistricting commissions to curb gerrymandering, among other things.

The second would require Super PACs to make their donor lists public and establish a six-to-one federal matching program, using taxpayer dollars to supplement candidates’ war chests. The third would require all presidential and vice presidential candidates to disclose at least 10 years of tax returns, and tighten restrictions on lobbyists.

Manchin—ever the thorn in his party’s side—was the sole Democratic hold-out on S.1, arguing for bipartisan solutions and opting not to join onto the bill as a co-sponsor. But the West Virginian softened his stance last week, releasing a list of narrower election and voting reform provisions he would support. He proposed instituting a nationwide voter ID requirement (with “allowable alternatives” like a utility bill) and scrapping the provision that would fund campaigns with taxpayer money.

Delta Keeps Climbing

Dr. Anthony Fauci didn’t mince words in his virtual press briefing yesterday afternoon: “The Delta variant is currently the greatest threat in the U.S. to our attempt to eliminate COVID-19.”

Whether that sentence induces panic or an eyeroll, listen to Fauci’s next one: “Good news: Our vaccines are effective against the Delta variant.”

Coronavirus variant B.1.617.2—which was given the “Delta” moniker after being discovered in India several months ago—is “unquestionably” more transmissible than the original SARS-CoV-2 or Alpha variant, Fauci said yesterday. He added that itis “associated with an increased disease severity as reflected by hospitalization risk.”

Don’t believe him? Check out what’s happening in the United Kingdom, where the Delta variant made up approximately 90 percent of new COVID cases confirmed last week. The variant has caused Britain’s first sustained resurgence of the virus since December, which led Prime Minister Boris Johnson to extend into late-July lockdown measures that were originally set to be lifted this week.

The United States is not there yet—we’re currently averaging just more than 11,000 new COVID cases per day, a record low since the pandemic began. But as the total number of new cases falls, the percentage caused by the Delta variant continues to rise: 1.3 percent on May 8, 2.3 percent on May 22, and 9.5 percent on June 5. Fauci said yesterday the latest figure—not yet on the CDC’s website—is 20.6 percent, and CDC Director Rochelle Walensky predicted Friday that Delta will “probably” soon become the United States’ dominant strain.

Worth Your Time

  • News organizations depicting both Republicans and Democrats in a fair light are few and far between. Fortunately for the “politically homeless,” more Americans have begun to break free of their echo chambers, actively seeking out multiple perspectives on any given issue. Matt Fuchs chronicles this growing phenomenon in a piece for Wired. “The majority of US adults say one-sided information on social media is a major problem, though many might mean only information that counters their own beliefs,” Fuchs writes. “Visitors to sites like AllSides seek out views at odds with their own; they enjoy discussing political differences more than the fleeting satisfaction of tribal disputes on Facebook. Some are troubled by how their friend circles and social media followers mirror their own beliefs. A few… are looking to understand friends or acquaintances with differing political stances.”
  • Ross Douthat’s take on the Catholic bishops/President Biden situation is well worth your time. “There are many good reasons to avoid a political confrontation over communion and abortion right now, many reasons to expect that any effort will backfire or just fail,” he writes. “But if, over the next few generations, we move into a world where the liberalism of Catholic politicians requires them to support not just abortion rights but a brave new world of human life manufactured, commodified, vivisected and casually snuffed out—well, then the bishops of tomorrow may look back on today and wish they’d found a way to say ‘enough.’”
  • Friend of The Dispatch and Manhattan Institute fellow Andy Smarick takes on the “take it seriously, not literally” line of defense in his latest for National Affairs. “Most people who care about American public life would admit that our political rhetoric is in a bad way. We seem to no longer understand the role veracity should play in the public sphere,” he writes. The “seriously, not literally” phenomenon, he argues, is a key reason why. It “rests on the idea that there exists a difference between fact and gist—that we can advance the latter without obsessing about the former. … Do we look past the factual inaccuracies in the 1619 Project and just take seriously its overarching point about centuries of American racism? Do we ignore the false claims undergirding the Trump campaign’s election lawsuits and just take seriously their primary claim that institutional forces sought to undermine his presidency? Do we discount the lack of evidence for an accusation of sexual assault and simply take seriously the underlying point about sexism, abuse, and privilege?”

Presented Without Comment

Toeing the Company Line

  • With voting in New York City’s mayoral race coming to a close yesterday, Sarah wrote her latest Sweepabout the trendlines she’ll be looking at—and why we likely won’t know the final results for weeks. Plus, Chris Stirewalt on Ron Johnson and Chuck Grassley’s impending retirement decisions, and how they’ll affect the GOP’s chances of retaking the Senate next year.
  • Scott Winship, director of poverty studies at the American Enterprise Institute, joined Jonah on Tuesday’s Remnant to discuss the history of poverty in the United States. Is the success sequence outdated? Should America be based on bourgeois morality? And how should conservatives approach solutions to racial disparities?
  • On the site today, Tripp takes a look into the surge in murder and violent crime since 2020. While some have cited the pandemic as a cause, statistics show that murder rates have actually been increasing since 2014. What’s going on?
  • When Abiy Ahmed became prime minister of Ethiopia in 2018, he was hailed as a reformer and pioneer for democracy. Yet this week he is widely expected to be named the winner of a parliamentary election in which whole regions of the country could not or would not vote. Emma reports.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Haley Byrd Wilt (@byrdinator), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), Tripp Grebe (@tripper_grebe), Emma Rogers (@emw_96), Price St. Clair (@PriceStClair1), Jonathan Chew (@JonathanChew19), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).