Texas drive-through voting upheld as judge blocks Republican bid to
reject ballots
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[November 03, 2020]
By Jennifer Hiller and Jan Wolfe
HOUSTON (Reuters) - A federal judge in
Texas on Monday denied a bid by Republicans to throw out about 127,000
votes already cast in the U.S. presidential election at drive-through
voting sites in Houston, a Democratic-leaning area.
The plaintiffs had accused Harris County Clerk Chris Hollins, a
Democrat, of acting illegally when he allowed drive-through voting as an
alternative during the coronavirus pandemic.
In a written order, U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen said the plaintiffs
lacked standing to bring the case and waited too long to sue.
"To disenfranchise over 120,000 voters who voted as instructed the day
before the scheduled election does not serve the public interest," the
judge wrote, adding that drive-through early voting was permissible
under Texas law.
In a narrow setback for Harris County officials, Hanen said
drive-through voting on Election Day likely violated Texas law. But he
did not halt it because of the plaintiffs' lack of standing.
Based on that part of the ruling, Hollins said on Twitter on Monday
night that nine out of 10 of the drive-through polling sites would be
closed on Election Day to ensure that votes are counted.
Hollins said the decision was made because Hanen said the tents used for
most of the sites would not qualify as "buildings," which are required
for Election Day polling places.
"I cannot in good faith encourage voters to cast their votes in tents if
that puts their votes at risk," Hollins said.
The plaintiffs appealed to the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals,
seeking to halt Election Day drive-through voting, but that motion was
denied. They will also appeal a similar loss in state court on Sunday to
the U.S. Supreme Court, their lawyer, Jared Woodfill, told reporters.
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A federal judge in Texas on Monday struck down a controversial bid
by Republicans to throw out more than 120,000 votes already cast in
the U.S. presidential election at drive-through voting sites in
Houston. Gavino Garay reports.
Harris County, home to about 4.7 million, is the third-most populous
county in the United States and has more than 800 voting places.
Texas, the second-largest U.S. state, is traditionally a Republican
stronghold but polls show a tight race this year between President
Donald Trump and Democratic candidate Joe Biden, with more than 9
million ballots already cast, eclipsing its total turnout in the
2016 presidential election.
On Sunday, the Texas Supreme Court rejected a nearly identical bid
by the same plaintiffs, who include conservative activist Steve
Hotze and judicial candidate Sharon Hemphill, to halt drive-through
voting in Harris County.
The same court also previously denied similar challenges by the
Texas Republican Party and the Harris County Republican Party.
The lawsuits said the county did not have the authority to decide
election procedures and drive-through voting violated the U.S.
Constitution's equal protection clause, as voters in other counties
do not have the chance to participate in drive-through voting.
(Reporting by Jan Wolfe and Jennifer Hiller; Additional reporting by
Ernest Scheyder; Editing by Richard Pullin, Clarence Fernandez and
Lincoln Feast)
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