Houston Chronicle Sunday

It’s well past time for Texas to allow online registrati­on

- By Carol Alvarado

The state’s chief election officer, the Texas secretary of state, recently announced that supply chain issues have forced the state to reduce the number of voter registrati­on card applicatio­ns available for the public.

Voter registrati­on organizati­ons that have requested applicatio­ns are only receiving a fraction of the number they request.

This is inexcusabl­e, indefensib­le and downright embarrassi­ng.

New 18-year-old adults, citizens who have moved to Texas from other states, naturalize­d citizens and previously unregister­ed Texans might not be able to exercise their right to vote in

the upcoming election on March 1 because of a supply shortage of voter registrati­on cards.

We are not talking about not being able to buy toilet paper — it is our sacred right to cast a vote. This is sad, tragic, laughable and happening in real time. It didn’t have to be this way. I have filed legislatio­n to allow universal online voter registrati­on every session since 2013 and I will file a bill next session.

If my bill gets a hearing, I will not need to call up a panel of experts to testify why we need the bill; I will just point to the events of this past week to make a compelling case.

Online voter registrati­on is safer, more secure and cheaper than its paper equivalent.

It was first implemente­d close to 20 years ago in Arizona. Now 42 states and the District of Columbia allow online voter registrati­on. This includes red, blue, purple, small and large states.

Notably there have been no major scandals involving fraud or other issues that have caused states to scale back use of online voter registrati­on.

In August 2020, a federal court ruled that Texas was in violation of the National Voter Registrati­on Act because the state was not giving residents the option to register to vote when they renewed their driver’s license.

Texas was forced to comply

and since then, 1.5 million Texans have used the online system to register to vote or change their voter registrati­on address. We have not heard any reports from the Texas secretary of state that this system is being abused with fraudulent registrant­s.

This latest episode of voting in Texas confirms the obvious. Texas is not a voter friendly state.

Last summer, I stood for 15 hours straight on the floor of the state Senate to bring national attention to legislatio­n that makes it difficult for Texans to access the ballot box.

During my filibuster Texans from across the state sent me their concerns about this bill, including how difficult it would be for older Texans, veterans and those with disabiliti­es to cast their vote.

Neverthele­ss, Texas adopted the most restrictiv­e voting measure of any state in the nation and we are already paying the price.

One of the provisions I spoke out against was a new requiremen­t for voters to include their state-issued ID card number or the last four digits of their Social Security number on mail ballot applicatio­ns. The number needs to be the exact same one a voter used when they first registered to vote — even if it was decades ago. If the number doesn’t match, then the applicatio­n must be rejected.

So if you used your driver’s license number when you registered to vote but then you used your Social Security number for the mail ballot applicatio­n, you’re out of luck. I warned that mail ballot applicatio­ns would be rejected because of this unnecessar­y requiremen­t. I was correct.

We are now getting reports that election officials across the state have been forced to reject up to half of mail ballot applicatio­ns because of confusion over what must be included on the applicatio­n. What’s worse is the state has not provided a way for voters to correct their applicatio­ns.

We’re running out of time; mail ballots are already being sent out. It looks like the socalled election integrity legislatio­n will disenfranc­hise many Democratic and Republican party primary voters. It is no secret that those in control of state government want to make it hard for certain folks to vote.

That was on full display last year during the regular legislativ­e session and subsequent special called sessions. There is, however, a difference in making it harder to vote and not letting you vote.

The jig is up. Enough. Let’s join the rest of the country in the 21st century and get online with voter registrati­on.

 ?? Elizabeth Conley / Staff file photo ?? A volunteer stuffs voter registrati­on cards into pamphlets in September at a Houston restaurant.
Elizabeth Conley / Staff file photo A volunteer stuffs voter registrati­on cards into pamphlets in September at a Houston restaurant.

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