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Sunday, May 30, 2021

Texas Republicans wrapping up work on voting restrictions over Memorial Day weekend - MarketWatch

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AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas Republicans dug in Saturday for a final weekend vote on some of the most restrictive new voting laws in the U.S., putting the last touches on a sweeping bill that would eliminate drive-through voting, empower partisan poll watchers and limit voting on Sundays, when many Black churchgoers head to from the pews to the polls.

Also targeted for suppression, according to critics, are younger voters, who, like Black voters, have tended to support Democrats. Republicans in Texas and elsewhere have sought to move polling stations away from college campuses, critics complain, while allowing gun licenses, for example, as proof of a voter’s identity but not a university ID card.

The Texas changes would need to be approved before midnight on Sunday, when the GOP-controlled legislature wraps up a session dominated by Republicans muscling through staunchly conservative measures pertaining to guns, abortion and how race can be taught in public schools.

But none have drawn backlash like Senate Bill 7, which Republicans packed with a raft of new voting restrictions that would alter how the country’s biggest red state conducts elections. Democrats have virtually no path to stop it from passing, thereby putting Republicans on the brink of a major victory in their nationwide campaign to impose new voting restrictions driven by former President Donald Trump’s false claims that the 2020 election was stolen from him.

From the archives (March 2021): Voting rights intensify as partisan battleground, with Democrats pushing H.R. 1 and Republicans altering election procedures at state level

See: ‘Big Lie’ allegiance dividing Republicans into Trump loyalists and a Cheney-Romney-Kinzinger wing

Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has said he will sign the measure, which Democrats have said they would challenge in court.

President Joe Biden released a statement calling the Texas bill’s final form “wrong and un-American.”

“Today, Texas legislators put forth a bill that joins Georgia and Florida in advancing a state law that attacks the sacred right to vote. It’s part of an assault on democracy that we’ve seen far too often this year — and often disproportionately targeting Black and brown Americans,” Biden said.

Lawyer Marc Elias, who has won a succession of cases brought by Republicans challenging 2020 election results and state voting processes, said the Texas legislation was set to make it easier to overturn an election result in the Lone Star State than anywhere else, even absent evidence of fraud.

The final version of the bill was hashed out behind closed doors by negotiators from the state House and Senate, nearly all of whom were Republicans. They preserved the elimination of 24-hour polling stations and drive-through voting centers, both of which Harris County, the state’s largest Democratic stronghold, introduced last year in an election that saw record turnout despite an ongoing pandemic.

GOP legislators are also moving to prohibit Sunday voting before 1 p.m., which critics called an attack on what is commonly known as “souls to the polls” — a get-out-the vote campaign popular among Black church congregations nationwide. The idea traces back to the civil-rights movement. Democratic state Rep. Nicole Collier, chairwoman of the Texas Legislative Black Caucus, said the change is “going to disengage, disenfranchise those who use the souls-to-the-polls opportunity.”

Collier was one of three Democrats picked to negotiate the final version, none of whom signed their name to it. She said she saw a draft of the bill around 11 p.m. Friday — which was different from one she had received earlier that day — and was asked for her signature the next morning.

Texas is also set to newly empower partisan poll watchers, allowing them more access inside polling places and threatening criminal penalties against elections officials who restrict their movement. Republicans originally proposed giving poll watchers the right to take photos, but that language was removed from the final bill that lawmakers were set to vote on this weekend.

Another new provision could also make it easier to overturn an election in Texas, allowing for a judge to void an outcome if the number of fraudulent votes cast could change the result, regardless of whether it was proved that fraud affected the outcome.

Major corporations, including Texas-based American Airlines AAL, -0.78% and Dell DELL, -1.06%, have warned that the measures could harm democracy and the economic climate. But Republicans shrugged off their objections, and in some cases, ripped business leaders for speaking out.

The top Republican negotiators, state Sen. Bryan Hughes and state Rep. Briscoe Cain, called the bill “one of the most comprehensive and sensible election reform bills” in Texas history.

“Even as the national media minimizes the importance of election integrity, the Texas Legislature has not bent to headlines or corporate virtue signaling,” they said in a joint statement.

See: American Airlines, Dell oppose proposed new voting restrictions in Texas

Texas already has some of the country’s tightest voting restrictions and is regularly cited by nonpartisan groups as a state where it is especially hard to vote. It was one of the few states that did not make it easier to vote by mail during the pandemic, with Trump, who himself has voted by mail, explicitly observing that he saw absentee voting as harmful to Republicans and turning it into a partisan issue.

Texas is also the last big battleground in Republicans’ efforts to tighten voting laws around the country. Florida, Georgia and Arizona have also approved new voting restrictions in recent months.

See: ‘A step backward’: Coca-Cola joins fellow top Atlanta employer Delta in blasting new Georgia voting curbs as undemocratic

Since Trump’s defeat, at least 14 states have enacted more restrictive voting laws, according to the New York–based Brennan Center for Justice. It has also counted nearly 400 bills filed this year nationwide that would restrict voting.

Republican lawmakers in Texas have insisted that the changes are not a response to Trump’s false claims of widespread fraud but are needed to restore confidence in the voting process. But doubts about the election’s outcome have been fanned by some of the state’s top GOP leaders, including Attorney General Ken Paxton, who led a failed lawsuit at the U.S. Supreme Court to try to overturn the election, even as 17 state attorneys general and more than 100 congressional Republican so-signed his effort.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who chaired Trump’s presidential campaign in Texas (and joined Trump in representing states’ efforts to stem the flow of the deadly new coronavirus last year as overreactions), offered a $1 million reward to anyone who could produce evidence of voter fraud. His opposite number in Pennsylvania, Democrat John Fetterman, hit back at Patrick’s fevered rhetoric, saying he deserved the reward after identifying voters in his state who cast votes for Trump on behalf of deceased relatives.

Nonpartisan investigations of previous elections have found that voter fraud is exceedingly rare. State officials from both parties, including in Texas, as well as international observers have also said the 2020 election went well.

See: Nov. 3 election was most secure in U.S. history, cybersecurity experts say

MarketWatch contributed.

Read on: Marjorie Taylor Greene and Matt Gaetz champion suspect Maricopa County recount in Arizona rally

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May 30, 2021 at 07:13PM
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Texas Republicans wrapping up work on voting restrictions over Memorial Day weekend - MarketWatch

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