BREAKING: Congressional Black Caucus chairwoman Joyce Beatty is arrested in the Senate building by Capitol Police during a march demanding they pass the For the People Act
- Officers arrested Rep. Joyce Betty, 71, after she led voting rights protesters into a Senate office building
- They chanted, 'Fight for Justice,' and 'End the filibuster,' in the atrium of the Hart Senate building
- Police said they arrested nine people for 'demonstrating in a prohibited area on Capitol Grounds'
- The protest came as the country divides between left and right over new laws governing ballots
- Last week President Biden described Republican efforts to change voting laws as a 'threat to democracy.'
Police arrested Congressional Black Caucus chair Joyce Beatty on Thursday afternoon after she led pro-voting rights protesters into a Senate office building.
Officers moved in as Beatty, 71, and a handful of other activists, including Women's March co-founders Linda Sarsour and Tamika Mallory, chanted, 'Fight for justice,' and, 'End the filibuster.'
Capitol Police later said they had arrested nine people for 'demonstrating in a prohibited area on Capitol Grounds.'
It comes as voting rights disputes divide the country between left and right: Republicans are devising tighter restrictions, with ID requirements and limited postal, while former President Trump continues to blame fraud for his defeat, while Democrats see an attempt to suppress turnout and make it harder for minorities to vote.

Rep Joyce Beatty, chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, has her hands ziptied behind her back while she continues to shout pro-voting rights slogans in the atrium of the Hart Senate Office Building in Capitol Hill

Beatty is led away as Capitol Police arrest nine protesters in the Hart Senate Office building. 'We will fight for freedom. We will fight for our right to vote,' she wrote before being arrested

Before being arrested the protesters chanted, 'Fight for justice,' and 'End the filibuster'

The protesters took aim at Senate Republicans and the filibuster, which they say is preventing passage of federal voter protections that would head off states from imposing restrictions



U.S. Capitol Police said they warned the protesters three times to end their demonstration or face arrest
Beatty laid out her stance in a string of tweets before she was arrested.
'Black women are demanding OUR right to vote! We’re marching to the Senate to send a strong message,' she posted before setting off.
Then at 3:42pm she added: 'We will not be turned around. We will keep walking.'
'We will fight for freedom. We will fight for our right to vote!'
Her office earlier said the event was in protest at new laws restricting voting across the country, as well as Republican refusal to consider drafting federal legislation to ensure equal rights and access to the ballot box.
'Fifty-six years after the passage of the Voting Rights Act, Americans’ right to vote is still under attack as state legislatures work overtime to dilute our power,' she said in a statement.
'So, as chair of the Congressional Black Caucus - but more importantly as a Black woman - I join with the chorus of individuals demanding justice, change, and the guarantee that my vote counts just like everybody else’s vote counts.
'This is our power, our message.'
Last week President Joe Biden condemned attempts by Republican-controlled states to change voting laws, describing them as a 'threat to democracy.'
'This is election subversion,' he said at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia.
'It is the most dangerous threat to voting in the integrity of free and fair elections in our history.'
He urged Congress to pass the For the People Act, which bans partisan gerrymandering, makes voting easier and tries to make political donations more transparent.
But Democrats fear the Senate filibuster - which requires at least a 60-vote majority - effectively ties their hands in passing legislation that would protect voting rights in the face of attacks by Republican states.
The nationwide split was highlighted this week when Texas Democrats fled the state to deprive Republicans of a quorum, halting progress of a bill they say would restrict voting.

Civil rights activist and Women's March co-founder Linda Sarsour is led away by a police officer after being arrested

U.S. Capitol Police said they arrested two men and nine women during the disturbance. 'After officers arrived on the scene, they warned the demonstrators three times to stop,' police said in a statement
Their secret flit prompted Governor Greg Abbott to accuse Biden of 'spreading misinformation' as he defended laws he said would expand early voting hours.
'Biden has a pattern of spreading misinformation & he's at it again today,' he said in a tweet.
'The [Texas Legislature] is passing a law that expands early voting hours & prevents mail-in ballot fraud. Texas is making it easier to vote & harder to cheat.
The Texas Senate bill would allow voting from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. – an increase of three hours on weekdays and 10 hours on Sundays – and would lower the population threshold from 100,000 to 30,000 for counties to open the polling booths for at least 12 hours in the week before Election Day.
Mail voters would also be asked to verify their identities with a state ID number or the last four digits of their Social Security number in a bid to get rid of signature verification that accounts for a higher number of rejected ballots.
The Texas state Senate approved their version of the election reform bill on Tuesday, but the legislation then stalled because the absence of House Democrats meant the two-thirds quorum of of lawmakers could not be achieved.
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