America

On Voting Rights, Biden Prefers to Negotiate. This Time, It Might Not Be Possible.

Senators Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Strom Thurmond during a Judiciary Committee hearing in 1987. Even with decades of work on civil rights, Mr. Biden faces especially wrenching decisions when it comes to Democrats’ voting rights legislation. 
Senators Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Strom Thurmond during a Judiciary Committee hearing in 1987. Even with decades of work on civil rights, Mr. Biden faces especially wrenching decisions when it comes to Democrats’ voting rights legislation. Jose R. Lopez/The New York Times

WASHINGTON May 27 — As President Biden confronts intense Republican opposition to the broad voting rights bill that Democrats have made a top priority this year, he might remember back to 1982 and an earlier partisan clash over the issue, one of a number across the years that shaped his views on deal making — and its limits.

A key provision of the Voting Rights Act, prohibiting states from denying the vote to people on the basis of race, was facing a high-profile Senate debate over its extension. The Senate Judiciary Committee, the panel handling the legislation, was led by Senator Strom Thurmond, Republican of South Carolina, but aware of the optics of having a former segregationist as their public face for negotiations, Republicans instead chose Senator Bob Dole of Kansas to lead them in talks about a deal.



courtesy : nytimes.com

  • Nepal News Agenacy Pvt. Ltd.

  • Putalisadak, Kathmandu Nepal

  • 01-4011122, 01-4011124, 01-4011125

  • [email protected], [email protected]

    Information and Broadcasting Department, Regd No - 2001/2077-078

Our Team

Editorial Board

©2025 Nepal Page English | Website by appharu.com