Being Emotionally Incontinent Does Not Help
Air Force One Forced to Return to Base En Route to Davos Following...
Police Theft
John Berman Resents Having to Correct the Record As Audie Cornish Makes Incorrect...
Minnesota and the Battle to Cripple ICE
The Reality of the Middle East
Guess When Catholic Cardinals Are Touted for Their Moral Authority?
Thank You, Michael Reagan
The Heritage Foundation Isn't Going Anywhere
Phasing Out State Income Tax Key to Success in Dying Blue States
Democrats Celebrate Their Earmarks
Leftists Upset About Trump’s Second Term, but Not Biden’s Disastrous Reign
Blood Is the Last Currency of Iran's Failing Theocracy
The Ten Commandments Are Coming Back to Public Schools
Trans Activist Dylan Mulvaney to Star in Nauseating New Musical
Tipsheet

'Written in Hell by the Devil Himself': The Bill Mike Lee Warns Will Cement Democratic Rule for Decades

AP Photo/Susan Walsh

Utah Sen. Mike Lee (R) blasted the Democrats’ election reform bill on Wednesday, arguing the legislation will allow them to stay in power for decades.

“I think I disagree with every single word in H.R.1, including the words ‘but,’ ‘and’ and ‘the.’ Everything about this bill is rotten to the core. This is a bill as if written in hell by the Devil himself,” the Republican told Fox News. 

Advertisement

The For the People Act centralizes power, he said, allowing the federal government to make decisions it “really has no business making.”

Though elections have always been carried out at the local and state level, Lee said the reason Democrats want to concentrate power in Washington, D.C. is “in an effort to ensure an institutional revolutionary Democratic Party of sorts, one that can remain in power for many decades to come.” 

He also called the bill “wildly unconstitutional” and said “bad things are going to happen” if power is taken away from states and centralized in D.C. 

The measure passed in the House last month with no Republican support. 

Advertisement

In addition to what Lee mentioned, H.R.1 also prohibits states from requiring voter ID, weakens voting security, automatically registers eligible “individuals” who are listed in certain federal and state government databases (the language does not specify citizens), expands voting by mail, and more. 

A group of Republican attorneys general wrote to congressional leaders last month, arguing the bill is unconstitutional

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement