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In The Verdict, a sleazy lawyer played by Paul Newman crashes a stranger’s funeral and cons the widow with a blast of blarney about her late husband: “I knew him vaguely through the Lodge. He was a wonderful man.”

I thought of that scene while reading the Republican tributes to John Lewis. The civil rights icon had fought all his life for voting rights, for equal access to the ballot, and high-ranking members of the GOP paid obeisance this past weekend with faux fulsome words.

House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy lauded Lewis as “a patriot in the truest sense,” and looked back fondly on a memorial march he’d made with Lewis across the famous Edmund Pettus Bridge. McCarthy called it “one the greatest honors of my life.”

Down in Lewis’ home state, Gov. Brian Kemp called Lewis “a civil rights hero, freedom fighter, devoted public servant, and beloved Georgian who changed our world in a profound way.” It was enough to make your eyes misty.

And up on Capitol Hill, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell swooned, “Our great nation’s history has only bent toward justice because great men like John Lewis took it upon themselves to help bend it…He endured hatred and violence. But he kept working because he was convinced that our nation had to be better.”

The gall of those people.

Their honeyed rhetoric is rank hypocrisy. All three are devotes of Republican vote-suppression; all three have sought to undercut Lewis’ life work. Last winter, Kevin McCarthy voted against an historic House bill, co-sponsored by Lewis, that would make it harder to disenfranchise minority voters. Two years ago, Brian Kemp became governor after leading a Republican effort to make voting more difficult, purging 1.5 million voters from the Georgia rolls. And Mitch McConnell, the most powerful figure in the Senate, has been sitting on Lewis’ House-passed voting rights bill for the last seven months, refusing to bring it up.

In the words of former Obama attorney general Eric Holder, their paeans to Lewis are nothing more than “performance mourning.”

If McConnell, in particular, truly wants to honor Lewis’ life, he’d let his colleagues vote on Lewis’ Voting Rights Advancement Act. To understand why that legislation is so necessary, here’s some quick background:

As a young activist, Lewis played a crucial role in pushing Washington to pass the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Signed by LBJ, the VRA was designed to help minorities gain equal access to the ballot – especially in states, mostly in the South, that had long suppressed minority voting. States with a history of ballot discrimination were put under close Justice Department scrutiny.

Such was the law of the land – until 2013, when the U.S. Supreme Court gutted the VRA. The Republican appointees erased the Justice Department’s enforcement powers, insisting that such oversight was no longer needed. John Roberts declared (in one of the most hilarious lines of 2013) that racial disenfranchisement “is no longer the problem it once was.” And Antonin Scalia said that the VRA was “a perpetuation of racial entitlement” (news to me, because I’d never realized that equal ballot was a racial entitlement). John Lewis told a reporter that Scalia’s remark made him want to cry.

Sure enough, soon after the high court gutted the VRA, vote-suppressing Republican states – freed from Justice Department scrutiny – sprang into action. Texas and North Carolina enacted strict photo ID requirements aimed at low-income minorities. Georgia, courtesy of then-Secretary of State Kemp, launched its voter purge and closed polling sites to make it harder for minorities to vote. Nationwide, roughly 1700 polling sites have been shuttered.

Lewis knew this would happen. A few months ago, while fighting his fatal illness, he was still denouncing that 2013 high court ruling, calling it “a shame and a disgrace.”

But Chief Justice Roberts had given Congress a wee bit of wiggle room: lawmakers could find a way to revise and update the VRA – enabling the Justice Department to stop voter suppression without picking on the southern states so much – then, yes, the VRA could live on. That’s precisely what Lewis was trying to do, with his Voting Rights Advancement Act.

Alas, Mitch McConnell – for all his high-flown rhetoric about Lewis bending the arc of justice – has consistently refused to lift a finger for voting rights.

That’s ironic, because when the VRA was up for renewal back in 2006 (a provision in the law required its periodic renewal), the Republican House and the Republican Senate passed it overwhelmingly…with a thumbs-up from McConnell. Their reasoning: “40 years has not been a sufficient amount of time to eliminate the vestiges of discrimination…and to ensure that the right of all citizens to vote is protected as guaranteed by the Constitution.”

But that was so 14 years ago. Today’s Republicans are tethered to an openly racist president who’s terrified that equal ballot access will doom in November. Today’s Republicans pay lip service to John Lewis, and thwart him with their deeds. Today’s Republicans, in the words of Eric Holder, “wrap themselves in the Constitution while gutting its protections.” Unless or until these hypocrites are driven from power, John Lewis’ life work will remain unfulfilled.