Factbox-Republicans erect voting barriers across U.S. battleground
states
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[May 13, 2021]
By Julia Harte
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican lawmakers
in election battleground states have passed a wave of new voting
requirements and limits this year, saying the measures are needed to
curb voter fraud despite scant evidence of it in the United States.
Backers of the measures cite former President Donald Trump's baseless
claim that fraud underlay his decisive presidential election loss to
Democrat Joe Biden in November. Democrats and voting rights advocates
have sued state officials over the new laws, denouncing the efforts as
partisan power grabs that will disproportionately disenfranchise voters
of color.
ARIZONA
Republican Governor Doug Ducey signed a law on Tuesday to stop counties
from automatically mailing Arizonans early ballots if they do not use
them often enough. The legislation, also passed on Tuesday, will remove
voters from the state's "Early Voting List" if they fail to submit an
early ballot at least once every two election cycles.
Republican lawmakers in most other states have bundled voting
restrictions into sweeping bills to pass them in one go, but they are
taking a piecemeal approach in Arizona. The state's legislature is
expected to consider other voting hurdles in coming weeks, including a
bill requiring absentee voters to provide more proof of identity.
TEXAS
The Texas House of Representatives passed new Republican-backed voting
restrictions on May 7, barring officials from mass-mailing absentee
ballot applications and giving partisan poll watchers more access to
voting sites. The state Senate previously approved its own bill, which
would eliminate extended voting hours and prohibit drive-through voting.
A bicameral committee is next expected to combine both bills into a
final version, in a largely closed-door process controlled by
Republicans. The final measure would then get one last vote from each
chamber before heading to Republican Governor Greg Abbott, who has
indicated he will sign it into law.
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FLORIDA
A law signed by Republican Governor Ron DeSantis on May 6 imposed
additional requirements on requesting and submitting absentee
ballots. Absentee voters must submit new proof of identity when
requesting their ballots and reapply for absentee ballots in each
new general election cycle, rather than every two cycles.
The law also limited the use of absentee drop boxes to the early
voting period, gave partisan election observers more power to raise
objections and required people offering voters assistance to stay at
least 150 feet (45 meters) away from polling places, an increase
from the previous 100-foot (30-meter) radius.
GEORGIA
One of the most controversial new voting measures passed in Georgia,
where Republican Governor Brian Kemp signed a law on March 25 that
tightened absentee ballot identification requirements, restricted
ballot drop-box use and allowed a Republican-controlled state agency
to take over local voting operations.
Critics said the legislation aims to disenfranchise Black voters,
who helped propel Biden to the presidency and deliver Democrats two
U.S. Senate victories in Georgia in January that gave them control
of the chamber. Top U.S. companies also decried Georgia's law, and
Major League Baseball moved its All-Star game out of the state in
protest.
IOWA
Republican Governor Kim Reynolds signed a law on March 9 that
shortened the state's early voting period and Election Day polling
place hours, imposed tighter deadlines for absentee ballots to be
submitted, and made it a felony for election officials to disobey
guidance from Iowa's secretary of state, who is currently a
Republican.
(Reporting by Julia Harte and Joseph Ax; Editing by Colleen Jenkins
and Aurora Ellis)
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