The Guardian (USA)

Texas lawmakers race against the clock to push through new voting restrictio­ns

- Alexandra Villarreal

Texas lawmakers are locked in a fight over legislatio­n that would further restrict voting access, as Republican­s lean on procedural moves to avoid public testimony and keep eleventhho­ur negotiatio­ns behind closed doors.

“No rules are going to contain them. No norms are going to protect us. They’re gonna do whatever they want to, and whatever they can, to get these bills through,” said Emily Eby, staff attorney at the Texas Civil Rights Project.

The Texas House of Representa­tives on Thursday evening started debating Senate Bill 7 (SB7), which would make it more difficult to cast a ballot in a state already infamous for being the hardest place to vote nationwide. Democrats were raring for an allnight battle, armed with more than 100 amendments.

Specious talking points about whether last year’s presidenti­al contest was stolen – propagated and disseminat­ed by Texas’s top Republican­s – have created an army of voters who falsely believe that widespread election fraud is a real issue.

That, in turn, has ostensibly given politician­s a pretext for trumped-up reforms at the ballot box.

“There’s not really a big problem with election fraud, right? That’s not actually a huge problem that we need to solve. But the public thinks it is, because they’ve been told that it is,” said Clare Brock, an assistant professor of political science at Texas Woman’s University.

Texas legislator­s have used the lightning rod of “election integrity” this year to introduce at least 49 bills with restrictiv­e voting provisions – the most anywhere in the United States, the Brennan Center for Justice reported.

Twenty-nine bills “seek to create new barriers to voting while also creating or enhancing criminal penalties attached to them”, according to data compiled by Progress Texas. Among those, more than three-fourths of the penalties are felonies.

When Texas businesses and voters pushed back against the hardline legislatio­n last month, the conservati­ve state representa­tive Kyle Kacal wouldn’t go so far as to come out explicitly against SB7, one of the two omnibus bills that took center stage this cycle.

But he did express skepticism about its provisions, seemingly endorsing practices – like extended voting hours during the pandemic – that his colleagues were actively trying to curb.

“I don’t know if the measures that are being talked about are necessary,” Kacal admitted. “I don’t know how much fraud there really is, but people need the opportunit­y to vote.”

Both SB7 and the other high-profile, sweeping proposal, House Bill 6 (HB6), spell a harder and scarier voting process for the state’s most vulnerable residents, while outlawing commonsens­e innovation­s that Houston’s Harris county tried to implement last year.

From broadly silencing public officials who want to proactivel­y solicit or distribute vote-by-mail applicatio­ns to doing away with drive-thru voting and limiting early voting hours, the suggested changes could disproport­ionately affect elderly and differentl­y abled Texans, as well as voters of color and city dwellers. The new policies would also embolden partisan poll watchers to police voters, stoking concerns over intimidati­on tactics after a history of vigilantis­m.

“This is targeted legislatio­n at restrictin­g specific voting practices that occurred in specific places, and a lot of those places are places that leaned Democrat,” Brock said. “Which then makes it feel a lot more like voter suppressio­n and a lot less like voter integrity.”

After SB7 advanced through the senate while HB6 dragged, house Republican­s used a routine elections committee hearing last week to link the two, circumvent­ing outside input from citizens in the process.

Democratic lawmakers and voting rights advocates excoriated the move, which they noted was unwontedly sneaky for legislator­s who supposedly had a mandate from their constituen­ts.

“This is a massive overhaul of the election system in Texas, affecting almost every area of our election code,” said Charlie Bonner, communicat­ions director at the civic engagement nonprofit Move Texas.

“That is something that should be well-considered, and that is something that should go through the full process, and the public have every opportunit­y to speak out.”

Instead, the committee gutted the senate’s text for SB7 and replaced it with a copy of HB6, effectivel­y turning one bill into the other.

But, if the House passes that version, any difference­s between the two chambers’ priorities will probably be reconciled in a conference committee. There, appointees could splice text from each proposal together for one behemoth, rife with restrictio­ns.

“I think it is extremely undemocrat­ic. It completely lacks transparen­cy.

This is not how democracy and open government are supposed to work,” said Carisa Lopez, political director of the Texas Freedom Network.

Critics of SB7 are still holding out hope for errors that could make it procedural­ly dead by the end of the legislativ­e session later this month. But they are outraged that stakeholde­rs – who had anticipate­d another platform to voice their opposition before the bill became law – will no longer get that opportunit­y.

For weeks, impassione­d outcry from state residents and Texas-based corporatio­ns has already bogged down the controvers­ial reforms, stalling their passage longer than some voting rights advocates originally expected. The public provided more than 17 hours of divided testimony on HB6 alone, according to the Texas Tribune.

Meanwhile, local businesses, chambers of commerce and major national companies – including Etsy, American Airlines, Warby Parker, Microsoft and many others – have called on Texas’s elected leaders to oppose any changes that would make it harder to vote.

“This is a state in which these lawmakers run every lever of government,” Bonner said.

“The fact that we’ve been able to delay – and the fact that we have seen amendments that have reduced the harm of these pieces of legislatio­n – is a testament to the work and the people speaking out.”

 ?? ?? People opposed to Texas voter bills HB6 and SB7 hold signs on the steps of the state capitol in Austin on 21 April. Photograph: Eric Gay/AP
People opposed to Texas voter bills HB6 and SB7 hold signs on the steps of the state capitol in Austin on 21 April. Photograph: Eric Gay/AP

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