Mitch McConnell Calls Biden's , Voting Rights 'Rant' 'Incoherent, Incorrect'.<br />'The Guardian' reports Republican <br />Mitch McConnell has made his stance on <br />a voting rights bill clear.<br />'The Guardian' reports Republican <br />Mitch McConnell has made his stance on <br />a voting rights bill clear.<br />He does not <br />support a change <br />in voting legislation.<br />McConnell's comments, following <br />President Biden's plea to end the <br />"filibuster" rule, underscores the <br />difficult road ahead for Democrats.<br />The president’s rant yesterday was incoherent, incorrect <br />and beneath his office. , Mitch McConnell, via 'The Guardian'.<br />Former Senate majority leader <br />McConnell said the president had given <br />“a deliberately divisive speech that was designed to pull our country further apart.”.<br />Former Senate majority leader <br />McConnell said the president had given <br />“a deliberately divisive speech that was designed to pull our country further apart.”.<br />White House press secretary Jen Psaki says the Biden administration was disheartened by McConnell's stance on the bill.<br />It is even more <br />disappointing that <br />[McConnell] <br />has supported <br />and advocated for <br />voting rights in the past. , Jen Psaki, White House press secretary, via 'The Guardian".<br />President Biden reportedly intends to rally Senate Democrats to decide on changing or ultimately eliminating the filibuster.<br />Initially opposed to altering the Senate's "filibuster" rule, Biden now says voting rights must take precedent even if that means long-used procedures are lost or weakened.<br />The Freedom to Vote Act alongside the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act has now been approved by House Democrats.<br />Democrats hope the voting rights package can revolutionize how the country elects politicians. It now heads to the Senate.<br />According to 'The Guardian,' if it passes the Senate, election day will become a national holiday, mail-in voting will be expanded, .<br />and federal oversight in jurisdictions that have a history of voter discrimination <br />will be increased