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As Senate Democrats forged forward on a voting rights bill, titled For the People Act 2021, in late March, they faced fierce opposition from Republicans. On March 24, 2021, U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer criticized state legislatures for working on laws that he argued would disenfranchise Black voters, specifically by limiting voting on Sunday, a day when churches with majority Black congregations host events like Souls to the Polls. He received a rebuke from Mississippi Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith, which soon went viral. In the above tweet, author Stephen King incorrectly said Hyde-Smith is a Georgia senator, when in fact, she represents Mississippi. But on March 24, 2021, Hyde-Smith did express the sentiment in so many words that states should not hold voter events on Sunday because it is the Sabbath. She was responding to Schumer, who had criticized Georgia lawmakers for attempting to suppress early voting on Sundays, which would specifically affect Black communities whose churches have a history of using Sundays to encourage voters to cast their ballots. Schumer said: Why did the Georgia legislature only pick Sundays to say there should be no early voting on Sunday? We know why. It’s because that’s the day African Americans vote in the ‘Souls to the Poll’ operation where they go from church to vote. It’s despicable. Later, during a Senate Committee hearing, Hyde-Smith said she wanted to address Schumer’s comments. Her full remarks: Schumer responded that observing the Sabbath on Sundays is not, strictly speaking, biblical, if one is citing the Old Testament as one's source. I'll start by reminding my colleague of the separation between church and state, Schumer said on the Senate floor, and frankly, the Bible passage she talked about comes from the Old Testament when the Sabbath was on Saturday. Indeed, Jews still observe the Sabbath on Saturdays, as do Seventh-Day Adventists and several other Christian denominations. Hyde-Smith made her remarks around 25 seconds into the video below: She clearly stated that Mississippi would not hold election events on Sundays because of the Sabbath, and that the day should be devoted to God. Since this debate, legislators in Georgia backed down on restricting early voting on Sundays. The current version of legislation now requires that during the three-week early voting period in the state, counties would be required to offer early voting on the two Saturdays in that period, and makes it optional on Sundays. While Hyde-Smith did not explicitly say the words paraphrased in Stephen King’s tweet, she expressed the same sentiment. We rate this claim as True.
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