Arkansas Online

Texas advances new voting limits

Democrats pledge legal actions while governor waits to sign

ACACIA CORONADO

AUSTIN, Texas — Texas has become the latest Republican-dominated state to advance sweeping new limits on voting, despite no evidence of any problems with last year’s vote and a coalition of state and federal officials calling the 2020 presidential election the most secure in history.

The GOP-led restrictions cleared the Texas House on Friday, starting with the key vote at 3 a.m. It followed hours of debate, and lawmakers are now likely to begin negotiating a final version that will need approval before heading to Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who signaled an eagerness to sign it.

“One step closer to my desk & making it TX law,” he tweeted Friday.

In Florida, Georgia, Iowa and now Texas, Republican lawmakers have used claims by former President Donald Trump and his allies to justify new voting restrictions. They argue the new limits, which largely target mail voting, are needed to boost public confidence and improve security. In some cases, the rules also create onerous requirements and penalties for local election officials.

In Texas, Democrats have virtually no path to stop the bill in the GOP-controlled Legislature, but they warned of legal fights ahead.

“You have your vote, you have your majority. But guess what? I look forward to seeing you in federal court,” said Democratic state Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer before a final procedural vote Friday that sent the bill back to the Senate. He added that “history is on our side.”

The vote in Texas took place a day after Florida Gov. Rick DeSantis signed a wide-ranging list of new voting restrictions. New voting limits have also been signed into law in Georgia and Iowa. Republicans in Ohio and Michigan are also pressing ahead with overhauls of various election procedures.

“We are seeing the strong effect of President Trump’s big lie. We are seeing the Republican Party go all-in on supporting him and his lies,” said Sylvia Albert, voting and elections director for Common Cause, which advocates for expanded voter access. “We are seeing them use this opportunity to create deliberate barriers to voting for Black and brown voters. It’s un-American.”

House Democrats had dug in for a long fight starting Thursday, then struck an agreement with Republicans that significantly watered down some of what advocates called the most problematic aspects of the bill, which passed 81-64.

The amendments lowered initially proposed enhanced criminal penalties, allowed poll watchers to be removed if they breach the peace and clarified that election judges and volunteers wouldn’t be held liable for honest mistakes. Additionally, they instructed the state to develop an online format for tracking early ballots and to send voter registration applications to high schools.

Republican state Rep. Briscoe Cain, who authored the House version of the bill, said some of the changes were in response to recommendations made by disability rights groups and the NAACP.

“We don’t need to wait for bad things to happen to protect the security of the election,” Cain said. “I don’t believe that this is voter suppression; I believe it is voter enhancement.”

Other restrictions in the bill would outlaw county officials from sending mail-ballot request forms to all registered voters, efforts that voting officials in Harris County put in place last year to expand ballot access when in-person gatherings were more hazardous because of the coronavirus pandemic. Harris County, which includes Houston, is a Democratic stronghold where 44% of the nearly 5 million residents are Hispanic and 20% are Black.

Information for this article was contributed by Christina A. Cassidy and Paul J. Weber of The Associated Press. Acacia Coronado is a corps member for the AP/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

National

en-us

2021-05-08T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-05-08T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://edition.arkansasonline.com/article/281638193079400

WEHCO Media