President Trump has endorsed the idea of new mothers being able to vote by proxy.
Democrats leading the charge on an effort to allow new parents in Congress to vote by proxy rejected a deal between House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) that would have watered down the proposal.
A resolution introduced by Rep. Brittany Petterson (D-Colo.) would give new parents of both sexes 12 weeks to remain home with their newborn and vote by proxy.
Amid steep opposition from Johnson and Republican leadership, Luna led a charge to force a vote on the bill through a discharge petition, receiving enough signatures to bring it to the floorâagainst Johnsonâs wishes.
Petterson said she was âso gratefulâ to Luna for championing the measure but said the compromise arrangement âdoes not address the barriers weâve fought so hard to overcome.â
Jacobs said, âFrom the very beginning, our shared goal has been to support new parents so they can do their jobs and vote on behalf of their constituents while also taking care of themselves and their families.
âUnfortunately, this âdealâ falls short of that goalâsilencing new parents and perpetuating the status quo and the notion that Congress is ineffective and obsolete.â
Petterson criticized Johnson for going to âhistoric lengthsâ to prevent a vote on the discharge petition, despite its supporters following the proper procedure.
Last week, the issue led to a divided Republican conference and an early adjournment to that weekâs session.
On April 1, Johnson and House Republican leadership sought to head off the vote required by Lunaâs petition through a parliamentary move that would have tabled the petition through a vote on an unrelated rule related to an election integrity bill.
Following that vote, Johnson told reporters he was âvery disappointedâ by the outcome. Lawmakers were sent home with the rest of the weekâs session cancelled.
Luna in a post on X accused the leadership of âplaying political gamesâ with Trumpâs agenda.
The issue also led Luna to leave the House Freedom Caucusâthe powerful conservative flank of the House GOP.
Even the compromise deal largely resulted from President Donald Trumpâs expression of support for Lunaâs proposal.
âI like the idea,â Trump told reporters on Air Force One on April 4. âIf youâre having a baby, I think you should be able to call in and vote.â
Leaders said that the original measure was unconstitutional under Article 1, Section 5 of the Constitution, which could be interpreted as requiring in-person voting.
In a long statement posted to X on April 2, Johnson affirmed his support of families, citing his own large family, and said that allowing proxy voting for new parents would be a slippery slope.
âTo allow proxy voting for one category of Members would open the door for many others, and ultimately result in remote voting that would harm the operation of our deliberative body and diminish the critical role of the legislative branch,â Johnson wrote.
The controversy has drawn frequent comparisons to the proxy voting rules permitted under former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) from the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic until Republicans regained the majority in 2023.
At the time, Republicans were insistent that the Constitution required in person voting, and many felt that to change that stance on this issue would be hypocritical.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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