Ted Cruz BLOCKS Dems' 4am bid to pass their sweeping voting rights bill during marathon debate
- The Texas senator called it 'a federal government takeover of elections'
- Majority Leader Chuck Schumer attempted to pass the measure using unanimous consent, which meant striking it down needs one senator to object
- He called for debate of a 'compromised' bill that differs to the For The People Act
- Even moderate Joe Manchin supported debate for compromised legislation
- McConnell mocked the effort by asking whether it was an attempt at comedy
- It's the second time Dems tried and failed to pass sweeping election changes
Ted Cruz stood on behalf of Senate Republicans early Wednesday morning to block Democrats' second attempt at overhauling US elections with a sweeping voting rights bill.
'This bill would constitute a federal government takeover of elections,' the Texas lawmaker declared. 'It would constitute a massive power grab by Democrats. It would disenfranchise millions of Americans.'
'It would propounding undermine democracy in this country, and for that reason, I object.'
Cruz also claimed it 'would automatically register millions of illegal aliens to vote.'

Chuck Schumer proposed bringing Democrats' voting rights bill to the floor after he scored a victory passing the $3.5trillion infrastructure bill

Ted Cruz also vehemently criticized Democrats' $3.5 trillion infrastructure bill but Republicans could not stop its passage (pictured leaving the Capitol at dawn on Wednesday after the 15-hour session

Cruz proudly shared his objection on Twitter
After the upper house spent 15 hours debating and ultimately passing a framework for Joe Biden's hefty $3.5trillion infrastructure wish list on a party line vote of 50-49, Senate Majority Leader Schumer turned his attention to 'reactionary Republican legislatures.'
'In American today, we are witnessing the most sweeping and coordinated attacks on voting rights since the era of Jim Crow,' Schumer said in reference to the mounting number of GOP-led states attempting to pass election security laws after Donald Trump's baseless claims of voter fraud in the 2020 race.
He said the proposal would differ to Democrats' radical For The People Act and that a group of senators is working on a compromise bill.
Moderate West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin, who opposed the For The People Act, spoke in agreement and proposed debating his own 'amended voting rights legislation.'
But Schumer attempted to pass the bill via unanimous consent - meaning just one senator needs to object to kill the vote.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell accused Democrats of 'concluding the night with a little comic relief' by even bringing up the measure.

Joe Manchin, who stood against the For The People Act, proposed debate on his own amended voting rights legislation on Wednesday morning

'After ramming through this reckless taxing and spending spree, here in the dead of night, they also want to start tearing up the ground rules of our democracy and writing new ones,’ McConnell said.
He handed the floor over to Cruz, who said Democrats' voting rights bill would guarantee Americans could not vote politicians out of office, strike down voter ID laws and prohibitions on ballot harvesting, and other voter integrity laws 'supported by the overwhelming majority of this country.
It was followed by a back-and-forth between Schumer and Cruz where the New York Democrat attempted to engage in debate in two facets of their proposed election overhaul - gerrymandering and promoting transparency in campaign contributions.
Cruz argued against both.
On the former he claimed it was the right of state legislatures to re-draw districts.
For the latter, Cruz agreed and said 'the current system is stupid.'
He instead made a counter-proposal to engage in debate on his SuperPAC Elimination Act from 2018, which would eliminate the cap on individual campaign donations but require the person to disclose it within 24 hours.


Schumer and Cruz engaged in a back-and-forth where the Texas Republican struck down the New York Democrat's efforts to debate gerrymandering and campaign finance transparency
The proposal does not specifically eliminate SuperPACs, but Cruz said they would simply 'fade from relevance.'
Schumer objected.
'It's obvious to just about every American it would make a bad situation worse,' he added.
Democrats first tried to pass their sweeping elections overhaul in June, when it was filibustered by Republicans.
As of July, 18 states enacted 30 new laws that curb voter access, according to the Brennan Center for Justice.
A recent bid by Texas Republicans to pass voting legislation was halted when more than 50 Democrat lawmakers fled the state.
With more returning to Texas and the threat of possible arrest over their heads, the bill's passage is virtually guaranteed.
In early July Biden launched an assault on attempts by Republican-controlled states to change voting rights laws, blasting them as a 'threat to democracy' and vowing to protect 'free and fair elections.'
'This is election subversion. It is the most dangerous threat to voting in the integrity of free and fair elections in our history,' he said, speaking at the historic National Constitution Center in Philadelphia.
In a 25-minute speech that traced the history of the voting rights movement, Biden veered between attacks on Donald Trump and Republicans who are undermining confidence in American elections and defending his own administration's work on the voting rights.
His speech came as faces criticism from Democrats, including some of his faithful supporters, that he has not done enough on the issue amid fears his party could lose control of the House and Senate in next year's midterm election.
Biden called on Congress to pass Democrats' two key voting rights legislation, which are being held up by GOP lawmakers. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell has called them 'a craven political calculation' that shows 'disdain for the American people.'