Houston Chronicle

Polling shows that Texans don’t trust elections

- By Jim Henson and Joshua Blank

The news headlines across the state proclaimin­g record voter turnout even amid partisan wrangling over voting rules should not distract from the fact that Texas consistent­ly places in the bottom tier of state-level voter turnout.

Recent polling shows that the politiciza­tion of voting and elections has led to an indefensib­le consequenc­e: widespread distrust in the voting system and even in the outcome of the upcoming presidenti­al election among Texas voters. Although President Donald Trump bears at least some blame for the decay in Texans’ trust in the electoral system, a generation of Texas leaders also played a role — and it will be up to them to rebuild trust when the election is over.

The signs of Texans’ lack of trust in voting and elections are clear. In the October University of Texas/Texas Tribune Poll, a majority of Texas voters were either unsure whether they could trust the results of the presidenti­al election or outright said that they would not. Democrats were only slightly more confident than Republican­s that the American people would trust the results of the presidenti­al election (50 percent to 46 percent), and only slightly more willing to say that they would personally trust them, regardless of who wins — 45 percent to 39 percent.

The results from this latest poll starkly portray the continuing degradatio­n of trust in the democratic process. After 20 years of ever- escalating partisan conflict over voting and election regulation and elected officials making dubious claims about the prevalence of voter fraud, Democrats and Republican­s now view the voting system through two entirely different sets of lenses though with different bases in fact, given the shortage of evidence supporting claims of widespread and consequent­ial voter fraud.

In that same October survey, a majority of Republican voters said that ineligible people voting, people voting multiple times and votes being counted inaccurate­ly were “extremely serious” problems in the upcoming election. Among Demo

crats, a majority said that eligible voters being prevented from voting and foreign election interferen­ce were “extremely serious” problems.

Texas attitudes have been conditione­d by more than loose talk of “rigged elections.” The road to the commenceme­nt of voting for the 2020 general election in Texas has been a particular­ly rough one, buffeted by predictabl­e efforts by the majority party to minimize the vote of groups likely to cast ballots against it. The pandemic has led to increased calls for more flexibilit­y — and in these times, safety — in choosing how to cast a ballot.

Gov. Greg Abbott extended the early voting period and allowed mailin votes to be cast in person to accommodat­e the public health crisis, but he has fought against almost all other efforts to ease voting.

The merciful end of 2020 might lead to a set of new opportunit­ies in 2021. Regardless of the outcome of the election, the new year will bring yet another legislativ­e session beset with even more political uncertaint­y than that which defined the 2019 session — and much more fiscal scarcity. It will be a good session for finding things to do that voters notice but that don’t cost much.

The more competitiv­e political system emerging in Texas provides an opportunit­y for the Legislatur­e to both expand access to the polls and provide some measure of increased election security — something of an oldschool legislativ­e horse trade. Admittedly, with no statewide elected officials subject to replacemen­t in 2020, it’s an unlikely prospect that Republican incumbents will create more uncertaint­y for themselves in 2022. But reforms would bolster trust in the system, which in the end benefits minority parties just as much as it does majority ones — a fact partisans on both sides should consider in a Texas neither as red as it once was nor likely to be entirely blue in the foreseeabl­e future.

Henson is director and Blank is manager of polling and research at the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas at Austin.

 ?? Jason Fochtman / Staff photograph­er ?? A man walks toward the Spring Creek Greenway Nature Center to vote last week.
Jason Fochtman / Staff photograph­er A man walks toward the Spring Creek Greenway Nature Center to vote last week.

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