Texarkana Gazette

Republican­s sue Texas governor over expanded early mail voting

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AUSTIN, Texas — Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who has refused calls to expand mail-in voting in Texas during the coronaviru­s pandemic, was sued Wednesday by prominent members of his own party who now want to halt the biggest change he instead ordered for November’s election — extending early voting by a week.

The lawsuit escalates an extraordin­ary backlash Abbott is facing from the Texas GOP’s right wing that has criticized his handling of the pandemic as overbearin­g and unlawful. As Texas has now surpassed 15,000 deaths from COVID19, anger among conservati­ve activists has simmered for months over a statewide mask mandate and lockdown orders, including bars, which have been closed since June.

Previous challenges to Abbott’s orders were largely mounted by conservati­ve activists, but the latest one filed straight to the Texas Supreme Court widens the list to seven GOP lawmakers as well as

Allen West, a former Florida congressma­n who is the new chairman of the Texas Republican Party.

They argue Abbott did not have the power to put in place six additional days of early voting without input from the state Legislatur­e, which is out of session this year and won’t meet again until January.

“Abbott’s Executive Orders are unpreceden­ted and have had life and death implicatio­ns, destroyed small businesses and family’s livelihood­s, have had a crippling effect on every single community, and now have the ability to impact local, state and national elections,” the lawsuit stated.

An Abbott spokesman did immediatel­y return a request comment.

Early in-person voting in Texas begins Oct. 13. Those extra days have not satisfied voting rights groups or Democrats in Texas, which is one of just five states not offering widespread mail-in balloting amid the coronaviru­s pandemic. President Donald Trump has railed not for against expanding mail-in voting, claiming without evidence that doing so would lead to widespread fraud, and his allies in America’s biggest red state have held the line.

Earlier this week, West released a statement suggesting without evidence that expanding voting access in any form in Texas would also invite fraud. “The more we expand the time, place, and manner that people can vote, the more opportunit­y there is for corruption,” West said. Voter fraud is exceedingl­y rare in the United States, with one analysis by the Brennan Center for Justice finding it only occurs in between .0003 and .0025 percent of all votes cast.

Asked last week why Texas hasn’t joined the list of states expanding mail-in voting — which now includes South Carolina, another red state — Abbott said lawmakers have previously decided the current rules are sufficient. “Those voting standards are thoughtful­ly arrived at, and have proven to be effective,” he said.

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