here, but, you know, as you have noted and as we have noted over and over again, this is where this all comes back to the argument of the filibuster. yes, you have the house that s going to introduce a revised version of the john lewis voting rights act on friday, which is the anniversary of the date that president lyndon b. johnson signed the voting rights act of 1965, and you have senators who are working on a trimmed down version of the for the people act, similar to what joe manchin introduced a few weeks back, a month or two ago when the for the people act failed, and he said that he was open to some compromise there. but at the end of the day without scrapping the filibuster, the challenge is still two fold for democrats. yes, they need to craft a bill all 50 democrats will sign on to, but democrats still need to get ten votes from republicans and a party that does not believe election laws should be made at a federal level and whose electoral portions are hinged on the issue.