Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

House committee favors 2 measures on elections

- RACHEL HERZOG

A House committee on Wednesday advanced bills that would tighten restrictio­ns around absentee ballots and increase the authority of state and county boards of elections.

House Bill 1715 by Rep. Mark Lowery, R-Maumelle, would ban the distributi­on of unsolicite­d absentee ballot applicatio­ns to voters by designated elected officials and would make the possession of more than four absentee ballots by one person a rebuttable presumptio­n of intent to defraud.

House Bill 1803, also by Lowery, would give the state Board of Election Commission­ers the authority to institute corrective actions in response to complaints and would expand the types of violations about which county election boards can make complaints.

Lowery was joined in presenting the bills to the House Committee on State Agencies and Government­al Affairs by Deputy Attorney General Doug House.

During the 2020 election, the absentee ballots of several hundred Pulaski County voters were set aside because of missing photo ID copies or signatures.

The nonprofit group For AR People assisted with efforts to reach voters to fix, or “cure,” their ballots so they could be counted.

The nonpartisa­n group worked with the Pulaski County clerk’s office to set up a drive-up tent outside the courthouse.

House said the group didn’t have any oversight.

HB1715 would also require that signatures on absentee ballots be compared to the signatures on the voters’ original registrati­on certificat­es.

Regarding HB1803, House said the bill was the best way to take care of problems in elections without having to turn them over to the federal government.

“Frankly, many times fraud is not counted or tabulated unless there’s a prosecutio­n,” Lowery said.

Rep. Fred Love, D-Little Rock, said he voted against both bills, calling them “a piece of a voter suppressio­n puzzle.”

“The reason why you don’t mention fraud is because there’s no fraud involved. … There’s been irregulari­ties in all elections, and so these laws don’t change anything except you’re trying to suppress the vote,” Love said.

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