Administration of Joseph R. Biden, Jr., 2022

January 11, 2022

The President. In our lives and the lives of our Nationâthe life of our Nation, there are moments so stark that they divide all that came before from everything that followed. They stop time. They rip away the trivial from the essential. And they force us to confront hard truths about ourselves, about our institutions, and about our democracy. In the words of Scripture, they remind us to "hate evil, love good, and establish justice in the gate."

Last week, [Vice]* President Harris and I stood in the United States Capitol to observe one of those "before and after" moments in American history: January 6 insurrection on the citadel of our democracy. Today we come to Atlantaâthe cradle of civil rightsâto make clear what must come after that dreadful day when a dagger was literally held at the throat of American democracy.

We stand on the grounds that connect Clark AtlantaâAtlanta University, Morehouse College, near Spelman Collegeâthe home of generations of advocates, activists, educators and preachers; young people, just like the students here, who have done so much to build a better America.

We visited the sacred Ebenezer Baptist Church and paused to prayed at the crypt of Dr. and Mrs. King, and spent time with their family. And here in the districtâas was pointed outâ represented and reflected the life of beloved friend John Lewis.

They stoppedâtime stopped, and they forced the country to confront the hard truths and to act, to act to keep the promise of America alive: the promise that holds that we're all created equal but, more importantly, deserve to be treated equally. And from those moments of darkness and despair came light and hope.

Democrats, Republicans, and Independents worked to pass the historic Civil Rights Act and the voting rights legislation. And each successive generation continued that ongoing work.

But then the violent mob of January 6, 2021, empowered and encouraged by a defeated former President, sought to win through violence what he had lost at the ballot box, to impose the will of the mob, to overturn a free and fair election, and, for the first timeâthe first time in American history, theyâto stop the peaceful transfer of power.

They failed. They failed. But democracy'sâbut democracy's visionâvictory was not certain, nor is democracy's future. That's why we're here today to stand against the forces in America that value power over principle, forces that attempted a coupâa coup against the legally expressed will of the American peopleâby sowing doubt, inventing charges of fraud, and seeking to steal the 2020 election from the people. They want chaos to reign. We want the people to rule.

But let me be clear: This is not about me or Vice President Harris or our party; it's about all of us. It's about the people. It's about America.

Hear me plainly: The battle for the soul of America is not over. We must stand strong and stand together to make sure January 6 marks not the end of democracy but the beginning of a renaissance of our democracy.

You know, for the right to vote and to have that vote counted is democracy's threshold liberty. Without it, nothing is possible, but with it, anything is possible. But while the denial of fair and free elections is undemocratic, it is not unprecedented.

Black Americans were denied full citizenship and voting rights until 1965. Women were denied the right to vote until just a hundred years ago. The United States Supreme Court, in recent years, has weakened the Voting Rights Act. And now the defeated former President and his supporters use the "big lie" about the 2020 election to fuel torrent and torment and antivoting laws, new laws designed to suppress your vote, to subvert our elections.

Here in Georgia, for years, you've done the hard work of democracy: registering voters, educating voters, getting voters to the polls. You've built a broad coalition of voters: Black, White, Latino, Asian American; urban, suburban, rural; working class, and middle class.

And it's worked: You've changed the State by bringing more people, legally, to the polls. That's how you won the historic elections of Senator Raphael Warnock and Senator Jon Ossoff. You did itâyou did itâthe right way, the democratic way.

And what's been the reaction of Republicans in Georgia? Choose the wrong way, the undemocratic way. To them, too many people voting in a democracy is a problem. So they're putting up obstacles. For example, voting by mail is a safe and convenient way to get more people to vote, so they're making it harder for you to vote by mail. The same way, I might add, in the 2020 election, President Trump voted from behind the desk in the White Houseâin Florida.

Dropping your ballots off to secure drop boxes, it's safe, it's convenient, and you get more people to vote. So they're limiting the number of drop boxes and the hours you can use them. Taking away the options has a predictable effect: longer lines at the polls, lines that can last for hours. You've seen it with your own eyes. People get tired, and they get hungry.

When the Bible teaches us to feed the hungry and give water to the thirsty, the new Georgia law actually makes it illegalâthink of thisâI mean, it's 2020, and now '22, going into that electionâit makes it illegal to bring your neighbors, your fellow voters food or water while they wait in line to vote. What in the hellâheck are we talking about? [*Laughter*]

I mean, think about it. That's not America. That's what it looks like when they suppress the right to vote. And here's how they plan to subvert the election: The Georgia Republican Party, the State legislature has now given itself the power to make it easier for partisan actorsâtheir croniesâto remove local election officials.

Think about that. What happened in the last election? The former President and allies pursued, threatened, and intimidated State and local election officials. Election workersâ ordinary citizensâwere subject to death threats, menacing phone calls, people stalking them in their homes.

Remember what the defeated former President said to the highest ranking election officialâ a Republicanâin this State? He said, quote, "I just want to find 11,780 votes." Pray God. [*Laughter*] He didn't say that part. [*Laughter*]

He didn't say, "Count the votes." He said, "find votes" that he needed to win. He failed because of the courageous officialsâDemocrats, Republicansâwho did their duty and upheld the law.

But with this new law in Georgia, his loyalists will be placed in charge of State elections. [*Laughter*] What is that going to mean? Well, the chances for chaos and subversion are even greater as partisans seek the result they want, no matter what the voters have said, no matter what the count. The votes of nearly 5 million Georgians will be up for grabs if that law holds.

It's not just here in Georgia. Last year alone, 19 States not proposed, but enacted 34 laws attacking voting rights. There were nearly 400 additional bills Republican members of State legislatures tried to pass. And now Republican legislators in several States have already announced plans to escalate the onslaught this year. Their endgame? To turn the will of the voters into a mere suggestion, something States can respect or ignore.

Jim Crow 2.0 is about two insidious things: voter suppression and election subversion. It's no longer about who gets to vote, it's about making it harder to vote. It's about who gets to count the vote and whether your vote counts at all. It's not hyperbole, this is a fact.

Look, this matters to all of us. The goal of the former President and his allies is to disenfranchise anyone who votes against them. Simple as that. The facts won't matter; your vote won't matter. They'll just decide what they want and then do it. That's the kind of power you see in totalitarian states, not in democracies.

We must be vigilant. And the world is watching. I know the majority of the world leaders: the good and the bad ones, adversaries and allies alike. They're watching American democracy and seeing whether we can meet this moment. And that's not hyperbole.

When I showed up at the Gâ7 with seven other world leadersâthere were a total of nine presentâVice President Harris and I have spent our careers doing this workâI said, "America is back." And the response was, "For how long?" "For how long?" As someone who's worked in foreign policy my whole life, I never thought I would ever hear our allies say something like that.

Over the past year, we've directed Federal agencies to promote access to voting, led by the Vice President. We've appointed top civil rights advocates to help the U.S. Department of Justice, which has doubled its voting rights enforcement staff.

And today we call on Congress to get done what history will judge: Pass the Freedom To Vote Actâ[*applause*]âpass it nowâwhich would prevent voter suppression so that here in Georgia there's full access to voting by mail, there are enough drop boxes during enough hours so that you can bring food and water as well to people waiting in line.

Look, it's also time to pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act.

I've been having these quiet conversations with the Members of Congress for the last 2 months. I'm tired of being quiet!

Folks, it will restore the strength of the Voting Rights Act of '65, the one President Johnson signed after John Lewis was beaten, nearly killed on Bloody Sunday, only to have the Supreme Court weaken it multiple times over the past decade.

Restoring the Voting Rights Act would mean the Justice Department can stop discriminatory laws before they go into effectâbefore they go into effect.

The Vice President and I have supported voting rights bills since day one of this administration. But each and every time, Senate Republicans have blocked the way. Republicans oppose even debating the issue. You hear me?

I've been around the Senate a long time. I was Vice President for 8 years. I've never seen a circumstance where not one single Republican has a voice that's ready to speak for justice now.

In 2006, the Voting Rights Act passed 390 to 33 in the House of Representatives and 98 to 0 in the Senate with votes from 16 current sitting Republicans in this United States Senate. Sixteen of them voted to extend it.

The last year I was chairman, as some of my friends sitting down here will tell you, Strom Thurmond voted to extend the Voting Rights Act. Strom Thurmond.

Audience member. Wow.

The President. You can say that again: "Wow." You have no idea how damn hardâhow darn hard I worked on that one. [Laughter]

But, folks, then it was signed into law, the last time, by President George W. Bush.

You know, when we got voting rights extended in the 1980s, as I've said, even Thurmond supported it. Think about that. The man who led the longest filibusterâone of the longest filibusters in history in the United States Senate in 1957 against the Voting Rights Act [Civil Rights Act]*; the man who led and sided with the old Southern Bulls in the United States Senate to perpetuate segregation in this Nationâeven Strom Thurmond came to support voting rights.

But Republicans today can't and won't. Not a single Republican has displayed the courage to stand up to a defeated President to protect America's right to vote. Not one. Not one.

We have 50â50 in the United States Senate. That means we have 51 "presidents." [*Laughter*] You all think I'm kidding. [*Laughter*] I've been pretty good at working with Senators my whole career. But, man, when you've got 51 "presidents," it gets harder. Any one can change the outcome.

Sadly, the United States Senateâdesigned to be the world's greatest deliberative bodyâhas been rendered a shell of its former self. It gives me no satisfaction in saying that, as an institutionalist, as a man who was honored to serve in the Senate.

But as an institutionalist, I believe that the threat to our democracy is so grave that we must find a way to pass these voting rights bills, debate them, vote. Let the majority prevail. And if that bare minimum is blocked, we have no option, but to change the Senate rules, including getting rid of the filibuster for this.

You know, last year, if I'm not mistaken, the filibuster was used 154 times. The filibuster has been used to generate compromise in the past and promote some bipartisanship. But it's also been used to obstruct, including and especially obstruct civil rights and voting rights.

And when it was used, Senators traditionally used to have to stand and speak at their desks for however long it took, and sometimes it took hours. And when they sat down, if no one immediately stood up, anyone could call for a vote or the debate ended.

But that doesn't happen today. Senators no longer even have to speak one word. The filibuster is not used by Republicans to bring the Senate together, but to pull it further apart. The filibuster has been weaponized and abused.

While the State legislatures' assault on voting rights is simpleâall you need in your House and Senate is a pure majorityâin the United States Senate, it takes a supermajority: 60 votes, even to get a voteâinstead of 50âto protect the right to vote. State legislatures can pass antivoting laws with simple majorities. If they can do that, then the United States Senate should be able to protect voting rights by a simple majority.

Today I'm making it clear: To protect our democracy, I support changing the Senate rules, whichever way they need to be changed, to prevent a minority of Senators from blocking action on voting rights. When it comes to protecting majority rule in America, the majority should rule in the United States Senate.

I make this announcement with careful deliberation, recognizing the fundamental right to vote is the right from which all other rights flow. And I make it with an appeal to my Republican colleagues, to those Republicans who believe in the rule of law: Restore the bipartisan tradition of voting rights.

The people who restored it, who abided by it in the past were Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush. They all supported the Voting Rights Act. Don't let the Republican Party morph into something else. Restore the institution of the Senate the way it was designed to be.

Senate rules were just changed to raise the debt ceiling so we wouldn't renege on our debt for the first time in our history and prevent an economic crisis. That was done by a simple majority. As Senator Warnock said a few weeks ago in a powerful speech: If we change the rules to protect the full faith and credit of the United States, we should be able to change the rules to protect the heart and soul of our democracy. He was right.

In the days that followed John Lewis's death, there was an outpouring of praise and support across the political spectrum. But as we stand here today, it isn't enough just to praise his memory, we must translate eulogy into action. We need to follow John Lewis's footsteps. We need to support the bill in his name.

Just a few days ago, we talked aboutâup in the Congress and in the White Houseâthe event coming up shortly to celebrate Dr. King's birthday. And Americans of all stripes will praise him for the content of his character. But as Dr. King's family said before, it's not enough to praise their father. They even said: On this holiday, don't celebrate his birthday unless you're willing to support what he lived for and what he died for.

The next few days, when these bills come to a vote, will mark a turning point in this Nation's history. We will chooseâthe issue is: Will we choose democracy over autocracy, light over shadows, justice over injustice? I know where I stand. I will not yield. I will not flinch. I will defend the right to vote, our democracy against all enemies: foreign and, yes, domestic.

And the question is: Where will the institution of the United States Senate stand? Every senatorâDemocrat, Republican, and Independentâwill have to declare where they stand, not just for the moment, but for the ages.

And here's one thing every Senator and every American should remember: History has never been kind to those who have sided with voter suppression over voters' rights. And it will be even less kind for those who side with election subversion.

So I ask every elected official in America: How do you want to be remembered? At consequential moments in history, they present a choice: Do you want to be the sideâon the side of Dr. King or George Wallace? Do you want to be on the side of John Lewis or Bull Connor? Do you want to be on the side of Abraham Lincoln or Jefferson Davis?

This is the moment to decide to defend our elections, to defend our democracy. And if you do that, you will not be alone. That's because the struggle to protect voting rights has never been borne by one group alone. We saw Freedom Riders of every race, leaders of every faith marching arm in arm, and yes, Democrats and Republicans in Congress of the United States and in the Presidency.

I did not live the struggles of Douglass, Tubman, King, Lewis, Goodman, Chaney, and Schwerner, and countless others, known and unknown. I did not walk in the shoes of generations of students who walked these grounds. But I walked other grounds. Because I'm so damn old, I was there as well. [*Laughter*]

You think I'm kidding, man. [*Laughter*] It seems like yesterday the first time I got arrested.

Anywayâ[*laughter*].

But their struggles here, they were the ones that opened my eyes as a high school student in the late fifties and early sixties. They got me more engaged in the work of my life.

And what we're talking about today is rooted in the very idea of America, the idea that Annell Ponder, who graduated from Clark Atlanta, captured in a single word. She was a teacher and librarian who was also an unyielding champion of voting rights.

In 1963âwhen I was just starting college at universityâafter registering voters in Mississippi, she was pulled off a bus, arrested, and jailed, where she was brutally beaten.

In her cell, next to her, was Fannie Lou Hamer, who described the beating this way, and I quote: "I could hear the sounds of the licks and the horrible screams. . . . They beat her, I don't

know for how long. And after a while, she began to pray, and asked God to have mercy on those people."

Annell Ponder's friends visited her the next day. Her face was badly swollen. She could hardly talk. But she managed to whisper one word: "Freedom." "Freedom"âthe only word she whispered.

After nearly 250 years since our founding, that singular idea still echoes. But it's up to all of us to make sure it never fades, especially the students hereâyour generation that just started votingâas there are those who are trying to take away that vote you just started to be able to exercise.

But the giants we honor today were your age when they made clear who we must be as a nation. Not a joke. Think about it. In the early sixties, they were sitting where you're sitting. They were you. And like them, you give me much hope for the future.

Before and after in our livesâand in the life of this Nationâdemocracy is who we are, who we must be, now and forever. So let's stand in this breach together. Let's love good, establish justice in the gate.

And remember, as I said, there is oneâthis is one of those defining moments in American history: Each of those who vote will be remembered by class after class, in the fifties and

sixtiesâthe 2050s and '60s. Each one of the Members of the Senate is going to be judged by history on where they stood before the vote and where they stood after the vote.

There's no escape. So let's get back to work.

As my fatherâmy grandfather Finnegan used to say every time I walked out the door in Scranton, he'd say, "Joey, keep the faith." Then he'd say, "No, Joey, spread it." Let's spread the faith and get this done.

May God bless you all. And may God protect the sacred right to vote. Thank you. I mean it.

Let's go get this done. Thank you.

NOTE: The President spoke at 4:14 p.m. on the Century Campus Green of Morehouse College, within the Atlanta University Center Consortium. In his remarks, he referred to former President Donald J. Trump; and Georgia Secretary of State Bradford J. Raffensperger. He also referred to

H.R. 4.

Categories: Addresses and Remarks : Voting rights in Atlanta, GA. Locations: Atlanta, GA.

Names: Bush, George W.; Harris, Kamala D.; Ossoff, T. Jonathan; Raffensberger, Bradford J.; Trump, Donald J.; Warnock, Raphael G.; Warnok, Raphael G.

Subjects: Budget, Federal : Public debt limit; Civil rights : Civil rights movement; Civil rights : Racial equality; Civil rights : Voting rights; Civil rights : Women's rights and gender equality; Commerce, international : Group of Seven (Gâ7) nations; Congress : Bipartisanship; Congress : Senate :: Filibuster; District of Columbia: 2021 civil unrest and violence at U.S. Capitol; Elections : 2020 Presidential and congressional elections; Elections : Voter participation; Georgia

: President's visit; Holidays and special observances : Martin Luther King Day; Legislation, proposed : John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act of 2021; White House Office : Vice President.

DCPD Number: DCPD202200012.