Houston Chronicle

Help the voters

It’s a disgrace that Texans have it harder than anyone else in theU.S. just to cast their ballots.

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It’s a week before Election Day, and more than 7 million Texans have cast their ballots early. In a state that long hovered at the bottom for voter turnout, this is cause to celebrate.

It is especially impressive when you consider this ignominiou­s caveat: It is harder to vote in Texas than any other state.

Texas is the poster child for what not to do to make it easier to vote, according to a recent study led by political scientists at Northern Illinois University. Texas has reduced the number of polling stations in some parts of the state by more than 50 percent, has an in-person registrati­on deadline 30 days prior to Election Day — when many states, including GOPcontrol­led Utah andWyoming, have same-day registrati­on — and has the most restrictiv­e pre-registrati­on law in the country.

It also requires a photo IDwhen voting in person and an excuse to vote by mail.

The state’s restrictiv­e voting policies are a disgrace, a collective thumb in the eye of democracy that demands legislator­s step up and change the law. When it convenes again in January, the Legislatur­e needs to make it clear that when it comes to elections, the goal is to make it as safe and easy as possible for eligible Texans to vote.

County elections officials, regardless of party affiliatio­n, understand this. During the pandemic, when the act of voting in person comes with some risk, they have instituted policies to help keep voters safe. They have done so while also preparing for what is expected to be one of the largest elections in recent memory.

Unfortunat­ely, forward-thinking officials, such as Harris County Clerk Chris Hollins, have run into opposition from Republican state officials and conservati­ve activists every step of the way. Harris County was sued over drive-thru voting, mailing out absentee ballot request forms to all registered voters and offering multiple dropoff locations for absentee ballots.

Only drive-thru voting has been allowed to proceed. Arguing unproven claims of voter fraud — and to the contrary of Republican-led states such as Arizona and Idaho, which allow everyone to vote by mail — the state also sued to limit absentee voting.

With few exceptions, the Texas Supreme Court has interprete­d existing law to back restrictiv­e voting policies, so the Legislatur­e must step in.

They should rewrite the law and make it clear for the erudite minds on the bench: A democracy works best when as many eligible voters as possible cast their ballots.

It is no secret what can make voting easier. Measures include early voting, voting by mail and allowing voters to register as late as Election Day, as well as providing online voter registrati­on and automatic registrati­on when you get a driver’s license.

Early voting is one of the few things that Texas can point to proudly, and Gov. Greg Abbott is to be commended for expanding the early voting period, but in most other areas the state falls stubbornly short. It even took a U.S. district judge to order the state to comply with federal law that requires driver’s license renewals and changeof-address requests to also serve as simultaneo­us voter registrati­on applicatio­ns.

The good news for lawmakers is that a few commonsens­e changes would improve access. As COVID-19 ravages the state’s coffers, some changes would cost little or even save money.

Texas needn’t be in the vanguard on voting reform to make important progress. We can save a discussion of Oregon’s experience with universall­y available mail-in voting and online voter registrati­on — experiment­s that have proven wildly successful and secure — for another time. But surely we can do better than last place. Look at Virginia.

In 2018, the state was 48th in the nation on the Illinois study’s cost of voting index. The latest ranking places it at 12th after legislator­s approved automatic voter registrati­on, dropped the in-person registrati­on deadline and made Election Day a state holiday.

We are heartened that some local candidates for the Legislatur­e with whom we spoke during the endorsemen­t process, including state Reps. Jarvis Johnson and Harold Dutton, expressed support for election law reform. Democrat Akilah Bacy, who is running for House District 138, said that if elected she would introduce legislatio­n to make it easier to vote.

“This isn’t about which party’s in power, it’s about people having a voice and deciding who their leaders are,” she said.

We agree.

No elected official’s strategy should be to win because the voters stay home.

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