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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTexas sues Harris County to stop it from sending all voters applications for mail-in ballots
Acting at the request of the secretary of state, the Texas attorney general sued Harris County on Monday after it refused to drop plans to send applications for mail-in ballots for the November general election to more than 2 million registered voters.
Attorney General Ken Paxton is asking a state district court to bar Harris County Clerk Chris Hollins from proactively providing the applications to every registered voter in the county, alleging Hollins does not have the authority under state law to carry out the plan.
The lawsuit marks the latest development in a growing battle over voting by mail in Texas during the coronavirus pandemic. That fight had focused on which voters are eligible to cast an absentee ballot, but it has now expanded to include a disagreement between the state and its most populous county over who can even receive the application to request a mail-in ballot.
Until now, the local election officials, including county clerks, actually responsible for carrying out elections had mostly been spectators as Texas Republican leadership fought off efforts by state Democrats and civil rights groups to expand voting by mail during the pandemic. Mondays action marks the most prominent intervention by the state in local election practices.
There is no state law that specifically prohibits election officials from sending out mail-in ballot applications to all voters. Instead, Paxton argues that county clerks are only expressly empowered by the Texas Election Code to send out applications to voters who request them, but there is no statute empowering County Clerks to send applications to vote by mail to voters who have not requested such an application.
https://www.texastribune.org/2020/08/31/texas-harris-county-mail-in-ballot/
CurtEastPoint
(18,639 posts)LisaL
(44,973 posts)NT
Thomas Hurt
(13,903 posts)when he knows damn good and well that most people don't meet the TX requirements.
LisaL
(44,973 posts)TX still doesn't allow no excuse absentee.
Thomas Hurt
(13,903 posts)be 65 years or older;
be disabled;
be out of the county on election day and during the period for early voting by personal appearance; or
be confined in jail, but otherwise eligible.
PaDemocrat
(54 posts)Its obvious everything is going to go against us.
Only lining is Texas was going to Trump anyways, but still.
LisaL
(44,973 posts)NT
PaDemocrat
(54 posts)It can def go blue in 2024, higher chance in 2028. This year? I give it about a 10% chance.
Awsi Dooger
(14,565 posts)Doubling Pennsylvania at 2%
Sickening
txwhitedove
(3,928 posts)then had to print the application, sign it and mail it in. I qualify by age.