Supporters, including Gov. Greg Abbott, say the measure helps prevent voter fraud, while critics contend that it amounts to âvoter suppression.â
In a last-minute change before Americans head to the polls in November, a federal judge has struck down as unconstitutional a key anti-ballot-harvesting portion of Texasâs sweeping election reform law.
Supporters say the provision bolsters election integrity, while critics say it amounts to âvoter suppression.â
Known as the Canvassing Restriction, the provision made it a third-degree felony for individuals to earn âcompensation or other benefitâ by conducting in-person interactions to assist voters in filling out or submitting mail-in ballots.
This restriction applied specifically to assistance provided with the intent to deliver votes for a particular candidate or measure, effectively criminalizing activities such as door-to-door canvassing or providing voting assistance at public events where mail-in ballots are present, if any form of compensationâsuch as gas cards, meals, or stipendsâwas involved.
âThe Canvassing Restriction is unconstitutional precisely because, by its plain text, it reaches beyond that narrow situation to protected speech in a substantial number of its applications,â Rodriguez wrote in his decision.
He later added: âIt is unconstitutionally vague in violation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.â
Further, the judge permanently enjoined the Texas attorney general from initiating or pursuing investigations related to potential violations of the Canvassing Restriction, which was codified in Section 276.015 of the Texas Election Code. The ruling effectively blocks the attorney generalâs office from investigating ballot harvesting claims.
The ruling, which only strikes down the Canvassing Restriction provision of S.B. 1 while leaving other portions of the law intact, drew sharp criticism from Texas Attorney Ken Paxton but was praised by one of the plaintiffs in the case, the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC).
Paxtonâs office vowed to appeal Rodriguezâs ruling while praising S.B. 1 for bolstering safeguards to prevent ballot harvesting and instituting other protections âensuring free and fair elections.â
âA rulingâweeks prior to an electionâpreventing my office from investigating potential election violations is deeply troubling and risks undermining public trust in our political process.â
LULAC celebrated the ruling as a victory for voter rights in Texas, particularly for minority communities who, the group argued, were disproportionately targeted.
Despite the latest ruling, other provisions of S.B. 1 remain in place as Texasâand other statesâgear up for the upcoming national election.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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