Congressional Democrats on Tuesday unveiled legislation to restore a provision of the Voting Rights Act that would require certain jurisdictions to secure approval from the federal government before making voting changes.

The preclearance provision was tossed by the Supreme Court in 2013, with the majority arguing that the formula used by Congress to determine which jurisdictions were required to clear voting changes was outdated.

A spokesperson for Rep. Terri Sewell Terrycina (Terri) Andrea SewellRevered civil rights leader Rep. John Lewis lies in state in the Capitol House approves Clyburn proposal to rename voting rights bill after John Lewis John Lewis carried across Edmund Pettus Bridge for last time MORE (D-Ala.), the lead sponsor of the House legislation, told HuffPost that 11 states would be expected to be returned to preclearance under the provision: Alabama, California, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas and Virginia.

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Sen. Patrick Leahy Patrick Joseph LeahyBattle over timing complicates Democratic shutdown strategy Hillicon Valley: Russia 'amplifying' concerns around mail-in voting to undermine election | Facebook and Twitter take steps to limit Trump remarks on voting | Facebook to block political ads ahead of election Top Democrats press Trump to sanction Russian individuals over 2020 election interference efforts MORE (D-Vt.) on Tuesday introduced companion legislation in the upper chamber. The bill is backed by 46 senators, according to a news release on Leahy's website.

The bills would institute a new formula that "applies to all states and hinges on a finding of repeated voting rights violations in the preceding 25 years," according to a fact sheet on Leahy's website. If a state was found to have experienced multiple violations within a quarter-century period, officials would be required to obtain federal approval before making changes to state voting systems.

Sewell's and Leahy's bills also "allows the Attorney General authority to request federal observers be present anywhere in the country where there is a serious threat of racial discrimination in voting," according to Leahy's website.

Sewell, who grew up in the town of Selma, Alabama, where Rep. John Lewis John LewisDemocrats urge Biden to resist filibuster, court-packing calls Rep. Bill Pascrell named chair of House oversight panel The Hill's Campaign Report: Biden goes on offense MORE (D-Ga.) once led a major civil rights march, said in a statement that the bill would allow the Justice Department to stop future efforts aimed at voter suppression.

“In my hometown of Selma and throughout Alabama’s 7th Congressional District, Americans bled, marched and died for the right to vote, but the modern-day voter suppression we saw in the 2018 mid-term elections shows that old battles have become new again," she said in a statement.

"Voter suppression efforts are unacceptable and un-American. But because of the disastrous Shelby County v. Holder decision in 2013, they are almost impossible to stop. The Voting Right Advancement Act we are introducing today would restore and bolster the Voting Rights Act, as well as undo the damage done by the Shelby County decision," Leahy said in a statement.

House Democrats, led by Sewell, previously pledged to make voting rights and a response to the 2013 court decision their top priority in the new Congress, which convened in January under a new Democratic majority.

The Senate version of the bill is expected to meet heavy resistance from the GOP-led majority in the chamber. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell Addison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnellPelosi: Trump hurrying to fill SCOTUS seat so he can repeal ObamaCare Senate GOP aims to confirm Trump court pick by Oct. 29: report Trump argues full Supreme Court needed to settle potential election disputes MORE (R-Ky.) took aim at Democratic-led efforts to expand voting rights in a fiery floor speech on Tuesday.

"Speaker Pelosi’s massive, new federal takeover of the way states and communities run their elections — contains no effort whatsoever to crack down on ballot harvesting," McConnell said, according to The Washington Examiner.

“This practice makes elections a kind of scavenger hunt to see which side’s operatives can return to headquarters with the most ballots in the trunk of their car. And once those operatives take a hold of those ballots, the voters have no way to keep tabs on whether they were ever delivered," he added.