Texas Democrats on Sunday night used every parliamentary tool at their disposal to tank a bill that would add new restrictions to elections in the state, ultimately staging a walkout to prevent a vote from being held.
The victory is likely short lived. Republican Gov. Greg Abbott said that the bill would be added to a special session agenda.
Senate Bill 7, known as the Election Integrity Protection Act, passed the state Senate along party lines early Sunday morning after an all-night debate. The bill came up in the state House Sunday evening for final approval. But after hours of debate and delaying tactics, the chamber adjourned after Democratic lawmakers left in protest, breaking quorum and ending debate.
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The sweeping bill would ban drive-thru voting, limit voting hours, make it more difficult to cast mail ballots and empower partisan poll watchers. The final version of S.B. 7 is the result of a bicameral group of mostly Republican lawmakers reconciling proposals previously passed by both chambers. Elements were hashed out behind closed doors, and Democrats have argued they were left largely in the dark as last-minute changes and entirely new provisions were pushed through.
Democrats repeatedly pointed to language that could make it easier to overturn an election in Texas that was not included in original legislation. According to the bill text, a court may void an election if the number of fraudulent votes cast could change the result, whether or not fraud was proven to have affected the outcome.
Opponents railed against the new measures during debate Sunday night, calling them "unconscionable" and undemocratic. "The voices of Texans were not heard in this debate," state Rep. John Bucy III said.
But Republican state Rep. Travis Clardy said lawmakers who back the measures had done their "level best" to be transparent and release information. The legislation will "make it easier for Texans to vote" and "harder to cheat" for "those determined to break the law," he said.
— Dartunorro Clark contributed.
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