The Guardian (USA)

Texas house approves bill restrictin­g voting rights after deal with Democrats

- Alexandra Villarreal

Texas Republican­s passed their bill restrictin­g voting rights on Friday afternoon, after cutting a deal with Democrats in backroom negotiatio­ns overnight.

“Nobody deserves to wake up and find out that their rights have been further restricted. But time and time again during this legislativ­e session, that’s what Texans have experience­d,” said Wesley Story, communicat­ions manager for Progress Texas, a rapid response media organizati­on for progressiv­e messaging.

The Texas house of representa­tives voted 78-64 to give Senate Bill 7 (SB7) final approval, setting up an opportunit­y for the Republican-controlled legislatur­e to create a Frankenste­in of voting restrictio­ns behind closed doors.

“This is really one of the last straws of … this nonstop attack – on communitie­s of color, on immigrant communitie­s, on communitie­s that just don’t have as much of a voice – to try to prevent them from speaking out,” said Gene Wu, a state representa­tive.

“We’re just tired of our districts being told that they’re second-class citizens.”

Armed with more than 100 amendments, opponents of Senate Bill 7 tore into the legislatio­n on Thursday evening. Their long-winded debate was intended “to drive home the point and to really emphasize that there is no reason for this legislatio­n”, Wu said.

In response, the state house approved a series of amendments addressing some of SB7’s most controvers­ial provisions. Those amendments, in part, target the bill’s severe criminal penalties, along with concerns over emboldenin­g partisan poll watchers.

The legislatio­n will now probably go to a conference committee, where both legislativ­e chambers can reconcile difference­s in the versions they passed.

Because of maneuverin­g by the house, lawmakers will be able to pull language from both the senate’s version of SB7 and HB6 – Texas’s two most high-profile restrictiv­e voting bills this cycle – during those negotiatio­ns.

SB7 and HB6 were designed as sweeping reforms to Texas’s electoral apparatus, targeting innovation­s such as the proactive distributi­on of vote by-mail applicatio­ns, late-night voting hours and drive-through voting that became flashpoint­s during last year’s election.

“At the end of the day, these bills discourage participat­ion in the democratic process, and their overall goal is to keep voters from the polls,” Story said.

“And we know that specifical­ly people of color, folks with disabiliti­es – those are the types of voters that are going to be impacted the most because of many of the restrictio­ns that we’ve seen, that are staying within the bill.”

Texas’s leaders have been pushing voting restrictio­ns for months under the guise of “election integrity”, after many Texans were convinced by the “big lie” that widespread election fraud stole the 2020 presidenti­al contest.

Their opponents believe that Republican­s – who, as of now, hold largely unchecked control over state government – are trying to pre-empt changing demographi­cs that could eventually boot them from office.

“This is the governor’s priority. This is the lieutenant governor’s priority. This is the speaker’s priority. This is the Republican party of Texas’s priority,” Wu said.

“Whether they’re public about it or not, in the back hallways, this is their most important piece of legislatio­n – because they need this to stay in power.”

 ?? Photograph: Eric Gay/AP ?? A group gathers outside the house chamber at the Texas capitol on 6 May to oppose a new voting rights bill.
Photograph: Eric Gay/AP A group gathers outside the house chamber at the Texas capitol on 6 May to oppose a new voting rights bill.

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