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Chair of Congressional Black Caucus arrested on Capitol Hill

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Rep. Joyce Beatty of Ohio. (306613)
Rep. Joyce Beatty of Ohio. Credit: Office of Rep. Joyce Beatty

Congressional Black Caucus Chair Rep. Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio) was among nine protesters arrested Thursday afternoon who were calling on the Senate to pass voting rights legislation, reports Politico.

Chanting “end the filibuster” and “let the people vote” the group marched into Hart Senate Office Building in what Beatty said was an effort to “send (senators) a message.”

The group of around 20 people spent about 20 minutes in the building before Capitol Police delivered several warnings and restrained the protesters with zip ties. The police detained Beatty first, then led her and other protesters outside to waiting Capitol Police vans. The remaining protesters walked out of Hart without being arrested.

“Today, I stood in solidarity with Black women across the country in defense of our constitutional right to vote,” Beatty said in a statement later Thursday. “We have come too far and fought too hard to see everything systematically dismantled and restricted by those who wish to silence our voice.”

The Capitol Police said the group was arrested for violating a D.C. law that prohibits “crowding, obstructing, or incommoding.”

The buildings that make up the Capitol complex are still closed to most visitors, but members and staff can escort guests inside. The group had initially rallied near the Capitol at a church building as part of what participants billed as a “Day of Action on Voting Rights” with Black women leaders, allies and advocates urging the Senate to pass two key pieces of legislation — a sprawling Democratic election reform bill and the John Lewis Voting Rights Act.

The larger Democratic bill has mostly stalled out in Congress after Senate Republicans filibustered the bill. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said Thursday in a letter to House Democrats that the House would continue its work on the John Lewis-named voting rights legislation — a bill aimed at restoring a portion of landmark legislation struck down by the Supreme Court in 2013. That former legislation restricted certain states and localities, most in the Southern U.S., forcing them to seek federal approval before changing certain voting laws. The legislation is a top Black Caucus priority, and the group has called on the House to reintroduce the bill before the August recess.

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