one vote to try to protect voting rights which is a really sacred right as far as i'm concerned. and it all started with the shelby koenig decision that took away voting rights. and then you have attorney general barr who is not particularly interested in going after voter fraud and voter suppression. he's not interested in all of that. and so you can see the kind of divisiveness that's occurred. i really loved your piece coming in about the divided country. but some of us actually listen to facts, we pay attention to facts. and there's a whole group of people in our country, sadly, who watch fox news and we're not going to be able to change their mind apparently. >> right. but do you have colleagues -- it used to be the case that you had colleagues who listened to facts. again, i'm not making this up. there was bipartisan re-authorization of the voting rights act that wasn't even that partisan. it was jim sensenbrenner, who is a very conservative member from wisconsin, was the kind of chief architect of it. does that still exist? are there issues you talk to your other colleagues across the