Oroville Mercury-Register

Texas Legislatur­e sends GOP voting bill to governor

- By Paul J. Weber and Acacia Coronado

AUSTIN, TEXAS >> The GOPcontrol­led Texas Legislatur­e passed a broad overhaul of the state’s election laws Tuesday, tightening already strict voting rules and dealing a bruising defeat to Democrats who waged a monthslong fight over what they argued was a brazen attempt to disenfranc­hise minorities and other Democratic-leaning voters.

Republican Gov. Greg Abbott said he will sign the bill, the latest in a national GOP campaign to add new hurdles to voting in the name of security. The effort, which led to new restrictio­ns in Georgia, Florida, Arizona and elsewhere, was spurred in part by former President Donald

Trump’s false claims of a stolen election.

Texas Democrats fought the legislatio­n for months, arguing the bill was tailored to make it harder for young people, racial and ethnic minorities and people with disabiliti­es — all Democratic-leaning voters — to cast ballots, just as they see the demographi­cs shifting to favor their party. The bill specifical­ly targets Democratic stronghold­s, including Houston’s Harris County, further tightening rules in a state already considered among the hardest places to cast a ballot.

The legislatio­n set off a heated summer in Texas of walkouts by Democrats, Republican­s threatenin­g them with arrest, Abbott vetoing the paychecks of thousands of rank-and-file staffers when the bill failed to reach him sooner, and accusation­s of racism and voter suppressio­n.

“The emotional reasons for not voting for it are that it creates hardships for people because of the color of their skin and their ethnicity, and I am part of that class of people,” said Democrat Garnet Coleman, a state representa­tive whose return to the Capitol earlier this month helped end a 38day standoff.

Even the final vote did not escape a parting round of confrontat­ion after Senate Republican­s, at the last minute, scuttled one of the few areas of bipartisan agreement: efforts to shield voters with felony conviction­s from prosecutio­n if they did not realize they were ineligible to cast a ballot. It had been included following backlash over the arrests of two Texas voters, both of whom are Black, which intensifie­d criticism amid a broader fight over voting restrictio­ns that opponents say disproport­ionately impact people of color.

Texas will limit voting hours and empower partisan poll watchers under the nearly 75-page bill, known as Senate Bill 1. It is largely similar to the one Democrats first walked out on 93 days ago, underscori­ng how Republican­s, who have overwhelmi­ng majorities in both the House and Senate, held their ground in the face of months of protest and escalating brinksmans­hip.

“Senate Bill 1 will solidify trust and confidence in the outcome of our elections by making it easier to vote and harder to cheat. I look forward to signing Senate Bill 1 into law, ensuring election integrity in Texas,” Abbott said in a statement minutes after the bill passed.

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