Skip to main content

Support Democracy!

Join  |  Donate  |  Volunteer  |  Take Action  


Address:

1212 Guadalupe St. #107
Austin, TX 78701

Phone:
(512) 472-1100
Copyright © 2021 • All Rights Reserved • Privacy PolicyTerms of Use • Powered by ClubExpress

News / Articles

Tougher rules debut for early voting in Texas

Acacia Coronado for Associated Press, Arkansas Online | Published on 2/15/2022

Problems with mail ballots crop up in first primary of ’22 

AUSTIN, Texas -- Texas began early voting Monday in 2022's first primary after a rushed rollout of tougher restrictions and the return of hundreds of mail ballots, dealing Republicans a clumsy debut of voting rules they tightened across the U.S. over the past year in the name of election security.

"Monday is going to be a big day for all of us to see how this plays out," said Isabel Longoria, the elections administrator for Harris County, which includes Houston and more than 2 million voters.

"I think for all of us there is just a sense of uncertainty," she said.

Election officials in Republican-leaning counties have also expressed frustration and confusion over changes they say they have scrambled to implement since Republican Gov. Greg Abbott in September signed a sweeping law that he said would make it "easier to vote and harder to cheat." For hundreds of Texas voters whose mail ballots and ballot applications have been rejected in recent weeks, that is not the case.

Harris County election officials announced just days before the first votes were cast in person that 40% of mail ballots received so far had already been sent back, mostly because they did not include required identification and signatures now mandated under Texas law.

Texas is among at least 18 states that will hold elections this year with heightened restrictions -- an outgrowth of former President Donald Trump's repeated claims that the 2020 election was stolen. Republicans have rejected Democrats' protests that the changes would disenfranchise voters, particularly members of minority groups.

But Texas had far less time than any other state to complete the work of changing how elections are run because of its especially early primary March 1 -- two months before the next states, Indiana and Ohio, go to the polls in May.

How smoothly Texas' primary goes in the coming weeks will be as closely watched as the actual races, few of which are high-profile. For Republicans, Abbott is heavily favored over a crop of far-right challengers in his campaign for a third term, but Attorney General Ken Paxton is fighting a tougher primary under the cloud of an FBI investigation.

Democrat Beto O'Rourke has an almost clear path for his party's nomination for governor. One of the biggest races is in South Texas, where Democratic U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar is in a rematch against a progressive challenger, Jessica Cisneros, weeks after FBI agents searched his home.

It's the first primary for new Texas Secretary of State John Scott, an Abbott appointee, who in an interview described the returned ballots and applications as a sign of voters adapting to the new rules.

He anticipates the May runoffs and November elections will run more smoothly and said he does not think the issues so far and concerns expressed by local officials amount to a failure by the state.

"I don't know how more time -- I don't want to say it wouldn't have been helpful, because it would have been helpful," Scott said. "But I don't know that more time fixes that issue, because it's a new process. And I think new processes, especially to those voters who were used to the old process, that absolutely is a friction point."

But the issues have extended beyond voters navigating new requirements. When the League of Women Voters last month requested thousands of voter registration applications for new U.S. citizens, the state said it could not fulfill the request because of paper supply-chain shortages after the new law required the forms to be updated and reprinted.

Then, county election offices reported they were having to send back an unusually high number of mail ballot applications for not including required identification such as a driver's license or Social Security number. Now counties say they are sending back completed ballots for the same reason.

Voters have a chance to correct the ballot as long as it is returned by Election Day, which has left officials waiting to see how many come back.

Scott said the number of rejected mail ballot applications had fallen to below 5% by this month.

Coronado is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative, a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

Read more