“If you can deliver an infrastructure bill for bridges, you can deliver voting rights for Americans. If you do not, there is no bridge in this nation that can hold the weight of that failure,” he continued.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Congressional Black Caucus Chairwoman Rep. Joyce Beatty, Alabama Rep. Terri Sewell, DC Mayor Muriel Bowser and activist groups also joined the King family at the news conference on Monday, calling for the Senate to act.
“If you really truly want to honor Dr. King, don’t dishonor him by using a congressional custom as an excuse for protecting our democracy,” Pelosi said, in reference to changing the Senate filibuster rules necessary to pass the legislation.
‘Whose side are you on?’
“The attack on our democracy is real, from the January 6th insurrection to the onslaught of Republican’s anti-voting laws in a number of states,” Biden said in pre-recorded remarks. “It’s no longer just about who gets to vote. It’s about who gets to count the vote and whether your vote counts at all. It’s about two insidious things: voter suppression and election subversion.”
The President continued, “We’re in another moment right now where the mirror is being held up to America, being held up again. The question being asked again: Where do we stand? Whose side are we on?”
Vice President Kamala Harris also called on the Senate to pass voting rights legislation, saying during the Martin Luther King Jr. Beloved Community Commemorative Service at Ebenezer Baptist Church to truly honor King Jr.’s legacy, “We must continue to fight for the freedom to vote, for freedom for all.”
“Today, our freedom to vote is under assault,” Harris said in virtual remarks on Monday. “It is time for the United States Senate to do its job. … The Senate must pass this bill, now.”
Pressure on two Democrats
Democrats have been searching for a way to pass voting rights legislation amid the pressure and pushback from members of their own party.
“Senator Sinema and Senator Manchin want a supermajority. Well, a supermajority of citizens support this legislation,” Arndrea Waters King, wife of Martin Luther King III, said Monday, adding that if both senators maintain their positions they will “extend White supremacy’s chokehold on our democracy.”
Martin Luther King III also criticized both senators and said, “History will not remember them kindly.”
CNN reached out to Sinema’s and Manchin’s offices for comment.
This story has been updated.