Texas tells U.S. Justice Department that federal election monitors aren’t allowed in polling places

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Texas’ top elections official told the U.S. Department of Justice on Friday its election monitors aren’t permitted in the state's polling places after the federal agency announced plans to dispatch monitors to eight counties on Election Day to ensure compliance with federal voting rights laws.

The Justice Department regularly sends monitors across the country to keep an eye out for potential voting rights violations during major elections. The agency said monitors would be on the ground in 86 jurisdictions in 27 states. The Texas counties are Atascosa, Bexar, Dallas, Frio, Harris, Hays, Palo Pinto and Waller counties.

Late Friday evening, Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelson told the federal agency that its election monitors aren’t among those allowed inside Texas polling places or in central locations where ballots are counted under state law. Election Day is Tuesday.

A spokesperson from her office said that there is nothing Nelson can do to change who is allowed in a polling place and that they are merely following the law. The Texas Election Code lists who is authorized to be inside a polling place, and does not include federal election monitors. Election monitors are still allowed outside polling places.

“Rest assured that Texas has robust processes and procedures in place to ensure that eligible voters may participate in a free and fair election,” Nelson wrote to a DOJ official Friday evening.

The Secretary of State's statement came shortly after Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick debunked social media claims about voting machines in Texas flipping votes from Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump to Vice President Kamala Harris.

"There has NOT BEEN A SINGLE confirmation that it actually happened," Patrick wrote.

For decades, the Justice Department has dispersed election monitors across the country to observe procedures in polling sites and at places where ballots are counted. That was a power granted to the federal government under the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which outlawed discriminatory voting practices and sought to equalize voting access. After the U.S. Supreme Court gutted parts of the law years ago, the agency now must get permission from state and local jurisdictions to be present or get a court order.
https://www.texastribune.org/2024/11/01 ... -monitors/

Well in some areas of Texas there are those the will decide which votes to count and not to count. You can bet that AG Ken Paxton is doing the happy dance
Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.-Huxley
"We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both." ~ Louis Brandeis,

Re: Texas tells U.S. Justice Department that federal election monitors aren’t allowed in polling places

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In CA the poll monitors are anyone who walks in off the street with a clip-board and an attitude that they deserve to be there. Because in fact that is the law. Anyone can be an observer as long as they follow rules of non-interference and cannot see the actual ballot selection of voters.

So I don’t know what’s the election laws in TX that would have their top election officials even think to such a thing without being laughed off the stage.
"It is better to be violent, if there is violence in our hearts, than to put on the cloak of non-violence to cover impotence. There is hope for a violent man to become non-violent. There is no such hope for the impotent." -Gandhi

Re: Texas tells U.S. Justice Department that federal election monitors aren’t allowed in polling places

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The Justice Department announced Friday it will send monitors to polls across the U.S. on Election Day, including in Dallas County and seven others in Texas, to watch for compliance with federal voting rights laws. The department regularly visits precincts during elections, but this year’s presence in 86 jurisdictions across 27 states will nearly double the number of cities and counties monitored during the 2020 presidential election. Texas is scheduled to have the highest number of jurisdictions observed in any state, tied with Massachusetts, according to the list released by the Justice Department. Federal workers propose monitoring eight counties Tuesday, a jump from two in 2020 and three in 2022.

This year, officials will visit Atascosa, Bexar, Dallas, Frio, Harris, Hays, Palo Pinto and Waller counties, according to a news release. On Sept. 30, dozens of state, local and federal Democrats in Texas wrote a letter to U.S. Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke asking federal officials to monitor the five most populous counties during early voting and Election Day, citing “the attacks on our right to vote.” But in response to questions from The Dallas Morning News, Alicia Pierce, a spokesperson for the Texas Secretary of State, said in an email, “DOJ monitors are not authorized in Texas polling locations.” She did not answer questions about whether federal monitors would be blocked from accessing precincts but said state election inspectors will be deployed “in various locations throughout the state.”

The Voting Rights Act of 1965, which prohibits racial discrimination in voting, allowed federal officials to observe polling places and sites where ballots are counted. But the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2013 ruling that struck down provisions of the law made it so that the Justice Department needed a court order or cooperation from state and local officials to enter polling sites, according to reporting by The Washington Post. During the 2022 midterms, Republican leaders in Missouri and Florida prohibited federal monitors from going inside polling places. The Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, which is coordinating the election monitoring effort, enforces federal law protecting the right to vote, ensuring people with disabilities have equal access to voting and prohibiting voter intimidation and voter suppression. Instances of disruptions at polling places or complaints of violence or threats should be forwarded to the Justice Department after being reported first to local elections officials and law enforcement, according to the news release.
https://www.dallasnews.com/news/electio ... -counties/

The difference is observing from outside a polling station or inside a polling station and according to the 2013 SCOTUS decision DOJ monitors need state/local approval or a court order to enter a polling station.
Last edited by highdesert on Mon Nov 04, 2024 7:45 am, edited 1 time in total.
"Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts." - Daniel Patrick Moynihan

Re: Texas tells U.S. Justice Department that federal election monitors aren’t allowed in polling places

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"The Republic of Texas" is making a show of things because democracy dies in darkness.

As a point of interest, over 35% of Texas' net revenue came from the Federal government in 2016. Thus, the rest of us subsidize their Texas two-step. The Feds should just walk on in, saying their protecting our investment in Texas' democracy.

CDF
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