World

US Justice Department sues Texas over controversial voting law

Suit challenges measure prohibiting drive-in voting and placing several other restrictions on hours and mail-in ballots

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 05 Nov 2021 11:00AM

US Justice Department sues Texas over controversial voting law
The Justice Department under Democratic President Joe Biden is also battling in court with Texas over a law effectively banning abortions in the state passed in September. – AFP pic, November 5, 2021

WASHINGTON – The United States Justice Department filed a lawsuit yesterday against the state of Texas over a recently passed law the federal government says will unfairly restrict voting. 

The suit filed in federal court in San Antonio challenges the law known as SB1, which was passed in September to revamp voting and elections in the southwestern state.

However the Justice Department says the measure, which prohibits drive-in voting and institutes several other restrictions on hours and mail-in ballots, violates federal voting and civil rights laws. 

Supporters say the law makes elections safer by protecting against fraud, but critics have said it disproportionately affects minorities’ ability to vote, especially black Americans, who tend to back Democrats.

The Justice Department said in a statement the law harms the rights of voters by restricting access to assistance for those who need help to cast a ballot and by rejecting mail-in forms and ballots over “errors or omissions that are not material to establishing a voter’s eligibility to cast a ballot”.

The Texas law was part of a push by some 19 states that have signed off on 33 laws this year which restrict voting, according to the liberal-leaning Brennan Centre for Justice.

Such laws have seen particular support in Republican states as former president Donald Trump has continued to baselessly claim that a massive voter fraud conspiracy lost him the 2020 presidential election.

Around 50 Democratic Texas state lawmakers fled the state in mid-July in an effort to block the law by depriving the House of Representatives of the minimum number of lawmakers necessary to vote on legislation. 

But the governor convened two subsequent special legislative sessions and enough Democrats finally returned to reach a quorum.

“Our democracy depends on the right of eligible voters to cast a ballot and to have that ballot counted,” said Attorney-General Merrick Garland in the Justice Department statement.

“The Justice Department will continue to use all the authorities at its disposal to protect this fundamental pillar of our society.”

The Justice Department under Democratic President Joe Biden is also battling in court with Texas over a law effectively banning abortions in the state passed in September. – AFP, November 5, 2021

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