U.S. House Democrats introduce bill requiring time off for voting

Reuters

Published Apr 11, 2022 05:20PM ET

By Moira Warburton

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A group of U.S. House of Representatives Democrats on Monday proposed legislation requiring employers give their workers paid time off to vote, following failed attempts by Congress to pass major voting rights legislation earlier this year.

The "Time Off to Vote Act" would close gaps in state laws, U.S. Representative Nikema Williams of Georgia said in a statement, citing the long lines at polling places seen in her state and others during previous elections.

Democrats, led by U.S. President Joe Biden, tried earlier this year to get major voting rights legislation passed, but were prevented by two centrist Democratic senators' refusal to eliminate the filibuster in the Senate, a mechanism that requires most bills to gain at least 60 votes in order to advance. All 50 Senate Republicans also opposed the broad voting rights legislation.

The new narrow bill would "ensure no worker has to sacrifice their wages or jeopardize their job security to exercise their sacred right to vote," Democratic Representative Andy Levin, a co-sponsor, said in a statement.