Issues
ELECTORAL REFORM:
Free and fair elections are the foundation of our democracy. In the last year,
millions more Americans registered and went to the polls than ever before.
We saw millions in Iraq and Afghanistan vote for the first time in their
lives. Yet, thousands upon thousands of Americans still fear that when they walk into the polls to vote, there is a very real chance that their vote will not be counted, or they will lose the opportunity to vote at all, because they are forced to stand in line for hours, due to a shortage of machines.
Faulty voting machines have no place in the greatest democracy on earth. Barriers
to voting are an insult to the freest, greatest nation in the world. This
spring, I sent out an email to Americans urging them to ask the Republican
leadership in the House and Senate to make election reform a priority this
Congress. In just one day 35,000 people called Senator Frist and Congressman
Hastert's offices and urged them to hold hearings on election reform. I'm
committed to making sure their voices are heard and Congress and the Administration
make electoral reform a reality this year.
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I'm working with my colleagues, Senators Clinton and Boxer, Congresswoman Tubbs
Jones and Congressman Conyers, and the nation's leading civil rights groups
to advance comprehensive election reform.
Congress must take action to ensure all Americans have faith in future elections
that the votes they stood in line to cast are counted.
But to make it happen, we need our Republican colleagues to make
protecting voting rights a priority and to put election reform legislation
on the legislative calendar this year. Congress must keep its promise and
fully fund the Help America Vote Act, fund the activities of the Election
Assistance Commission, and help states invest in better voting machines
with paper trails.
We must put party politics aside and join together as proud American
citizens to eliminate barriers to voting, encourage the greatest level
of civic participation possible, and restore confidence in the notion that
every eligible voter will have the opportunity to cast a ballot and have
it counted.
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