Texas lawmakers to consider sweeping voting restrictions
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[July 10, 2021]
By Julia Harte
(Reuters) - Texas lawmakers will consider
new voting restrictions on Saturday as part of a special legislative
session called by Republican Governor Greg Abbott after Democrats
blocked earlier versions of the legislation in a dramatic walkout.
Republican state senators introduced their latest version of the bill,
now known as SB 1, on Thursday, sparking outcry from Democrats and voter
advocates who said it was being rushed through the legislative process
to avoid public scrutiny.
Lawmakers will consider SB 1 and its House counterpart in committee
hearings early on Saturday.
The timing of the hearings suggested they could occur simultaneously,
making it difficult for opponents to testify on both measures, said
Anthony Gutierrez, Texas director of good-government watchdog Common
Cause.
On May 30 during the regular legislative session, Democratic lawmakers
denied Republicans the quorum needed to pass the original measures. It
was a notable victory for Democrats, who have unsuccessfully fought a
slew of similar laws passed since the beginning of the year in other
Republican-controlled states.
The Republicans' new proposals in Texas overlap significantly with the
original versions in limiting early voting hours, adding new
identification requirements to mail-in voting and empowering partisan
poll watchers. They do not include a controversial limit to Sunday early
voting hours, which some Republican lawmakers said had been erroneously
included in the original legislation.
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Texas Governor Greg Abbott speaks at the annual National Rifle
Association (NRA) convention in Dallas, Texas, U.S., May 4, 2018.
REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo
At a Friday press conference, Democratic state
senators called for a hearing on their own voting reform
counter-proposal. Their bill would extend the early voting period,
enable online voter registration, give voters a chance to fix
mistakes on mail-in ballots and require that poll watchers receive
training from the secretary of state.
Texas state Senator Royce West, a Democrat, said he hoped the
legislature's Republican leaders would be willing to "strike
compromises" between SB 1 and his party's alternate bill.
"Let me assure you, we'll do everything in our power to get a
hearing on this bill," he said, though he acknowledged it was
unlikely Republican leaders would grant that wish.
Texas state Senator Bryan Hughes, the chairman of the Texas Senate's
Committee on State Affairs, which is hearing SB 1 on Saturday, did
not respond on Friday to requests for comment on whether his
committee would hear the Democrats' bill.
(Reporting by Julia Harte; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Daniel
Wallis)
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