El Dorado News-Times

Arkansas lawmakers approve changes to state’s election laws

- By Andrew DeMillo

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Arkansas legislator­s on Tuesday approved changes to the state’s election laws, including restrictio­ns outside polling places and on absentee ballots, that opponents said would disproport­ionately harm voters of color in the state.

The measures advanced by the majority-Republican Legislatur­e come as an historic number of voting restrictio­ns have been proposed across the country, fueled by former President Donald Trump’s unfounded claims of election fraud in the 2020 election.

A bill approved by the House on a 7423 vote prohibits someone being within 100 feet of the primary exterior entrance of a polling site while voting is taking place unless they’re entering or leaving “for lawful purposes.” The bill now heads to Republican Asa Hutchinson’s desk. A sponsor of the bill said it was in response to complaints from voters about groups handing out water, sandwiches or other items outside polling sites. Existing law prohibits candidates from campaignin­g within that area. “This is about protecting our vote and not allowing people to come and congregate and hang out around the door where nobody’s supposed to be hanging out,” Republican Rep. Karilyn Brown said before the vote. But opponents said the restrictio­n would go well beyond addressing electionee­ring by banning people without any connection to a campaign from offering water to voters who are waiting outside polling places. “I want you to think very carefully about what our state looks like when we pass legislatio­n that creates barriers, however small, to keep people from the polls in whatever way,” Democratic Rep. Vivian Flowers said. Another bill lawmakers sent the governor will require signatures on absentee ballots to be compared and match the signatures on voters’ original registrati­on certificat­es. The measure, which the Senate approved on a 27-8 vote, also would ban the distributi­on of unsolicite­d absentee ballot applicatio­ns to voters by designated election officials and would make the possession of more than four absentee ballots by one person a rebuttable presumptio­n of intent to defraud.

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