Houston Chronicle

Voter challenges deemed invalid

County attorney says registrar shouldn’t have sent suspension­s

- By Zach Despart STAFF WRITER

The Harris County Attorney’s Office said Tuesday that the 4,000 voter registrati­ons challenged by a county Republican Party official were invalid, and the voter registrar should not have sent suspension notices to more than 1,700 county voters.

“The voter challenge they received was not in compliance with the law,” Assistant County Attorney Douglas Ray said. “If somebody doesn’t respond to that notice, we advise (the registrar) not to place voters on the suspension list.”

The developmen­t was the latest in the dispute over the registrati­on challenges, which devolved last week into a political spat between Harris County’s Republican and Democratic parties. The Democrats alleged, without evidence, that the challenges sought to throw their voters off the rolls. Republican­s chastised Ann Harris Bennett, the Democratic voter registrar, for mistakenly suspending registrati­ons.

A review of the 4,037 challenges, provided to the Houston Chronicle by Bennett, shows they are spread across Harris County and

do not appear to target any neighborho­od or community.

Ray explained to Commission­ers Court at its Tuesday meeting that to challenge a voter’s registrati­on under state law, the challenger must have personal knowledge that the registrati­on is inaccurate. Ray concluded that Alan Vera, the chairman of the Harris County Republican Party’s Ballot Security Committee who brought the challenges in July, could not possibly know each of the 4,037 voters on his list. Therefore, the challenges cannot be considered, he said.

Vera said Tuesday afternoon he disagrees with that interpreta­tion and will “take follow-up actions.”

Software glitch

He previously said he and volunteers had combed through the rolls looking for voters who had listed the locations of post offices, parcel stories or places of business as their address.

State law requires voters to register at the address where they live.

Bennett did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Bennett, who also is the county tax assessor-collector, told the court she failed to verify the challenges with the county attorney’s office before sending letters asking voters to confirm their addresses. Bennett said a software glitch caused her office to place 1,735 voters on the county’s suspension list but that the error has been corrected. She pledged to ensure each eligible voter can cast a ballot in the November elections.

Under Texas law, voters whose registrati­ons are “in suspension” still can vote after filling out address forms at the polls.

Commission­ers Court members acknowledg­ed that Bennett made a mistake in sending the letters and were satisfied with Ray’s explanatio­n. However, Bennett’s refusal to admit her office had erred led to a testy exchange with County Judge Ed Emmett. For four minutes, the pair squared off, at times speaking over each other.

“Before you sent out the letters that scared all the voters, did you check with the county attorney?” the judge asked.

“No, sir. I followed the election code,” Bennett said.

“Well, evidently not, exactly,” Emmett replied.

Court members appeared confused when Bennett’s staff, unprompted, handed each of them rolled-up documents fastened with rubber bands. They included maps of the voter registrati­on challenges and county Republican Party literature criticizin­g how Bennett’s office handled the challenged registrati­ons.

Office ‘turmoil’

Emmett said it seemed Bennett was injecting partisansh­ip into the discussion about the registrati­ons. Bennett said she was simply defending her office against false charges it attempted to disenfranc­hise voters.

“This put my office through a lot of turmoil,” she said.

 ??  ?? Ann Harris Bennett is the registrar who sent suspension letters to more than 1,700 voters.
Ann Harris Bennett is the registrar who sent suspension letters to more than 1,700 voters.

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