Lodi News-Sentinel

Texas beats 2016 vote count four days before Election Day

- By Rachel Adams-Heard

In a sign of the passions sparked by the U.S. presidenti­al race, Texas has surpassed its total 2016 vote count four days before Election Day.

Through Thursday, more than 9 million Texans had cast ballots, compared with 8.97 million four years ago, a record high at the time. Neither party knows who will benefit most from the surge, but it has put the reliably Republican state in play as a full-out battlegrou­nd in the campaign’s final days.

Nowhere has seen a more dramatic display of enthusiasm than Harris County, home to Houston, Texas’s biggest city and the embodiment of its rapid growth and diversifyi­ng suburbs. The county’s voting, driven in part by innovation­s by freshly appointed County Clerk Chris Hollins, so far compose more than 15% of all those cast in the sprawling state.

Across the U.S., local and state officials are battling in court over voter access and early balloting as the Covid-19 pandemic complicate­s an already tense election. Texas is among the most closely watched after recent polls have been narrow enough to entice Democrat Joe Biden to send his running mate, Senator Kamala Harris, to Texas for a tour of the state on Friday.

Many of the Texas counties with the most dramatic surges in early voting are urban centers like Houston, a trend infusing fresh hope into Democrats’ dreams of flipping Texas. But solidly red counties have also seen records. And Texas has historical­ly been lightly polled, leaving analysts skeptical of surveys showing a neck-and-neck presidenti­al race.

There’s no denying the phenomenon, however. The first day of balloting in Harris County, Oct. 13, attracted more voters than all of Georgia, which began the same day. Despite those throngs, complaints of lines have been sparse, thanks to drive-thru voting and more than 100 locations in the county. On Thursday, some Houston polls began staying open all night for people who can’t take off time from work.

Just seven months ago, America’s fourth-biggest city was making headlines for a very different reason. Residents voting in the Democratic primary complained of lengthy lines that kept them waiting until well into the night. Black and Latino voters were among those most affected.

“It is clear that the history of marginaliz­ed communitie­s being left behind in the voting process has led to polling deserts in areas of Harris County,” Diane Trautman, then-Harris County clerk, said in a statement at the time. In the middle of May, weeks before primary runoff elections, she abruptly resigned.

Enter Hollins, a 34-yearold Yale University and Harvard Business School graduate who served as a junior official in the Obama administra­tion’s personnel office. Tapped by county commission­ers to correct course, he has kept the early-voting system running, even as opponents continue to throw up new challenges.

Hollins, who also is vice chair of finance for the Texas Democratic Party, put his career as an attorney on pause to take over the post, becoming the first Black man to be county clerk. His job would be to make sure the third-mostpopulo­us county in the U.S. was ready for a historic election.

Part of the solution was straightfo­rward: Harris County simply needed more polling locations and longer hours. With that expansion, Hollins would need more volunteers.

With restrictio­ns on who qualified to vote by mail in Texas, Hollins wanted options for pandemic-wary voters. His solution: in-car voting.

 ?? GO NAKAMURA/GETTY IMAGES ?? An election worker accepts an absentee ballot from a voter at a drive-thru ballot drop-off site in Houston on Oct. 7.
GO NAKAMURA/GETTY IMAGES An election worker accepts an absentee ballot from a voter at a drive-thru ballot drop-off site in Houston on Oct. 7.

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