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|    Joe's Ho' to All    |
|    Texas Supreme Court sides with governor     |
|    30 Oct 20 01:31:51    |
      XPost: alt.gossip.celebrities, alt.politics.elections, sac.politics       XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh       From: epstein@clintonfoundation.org              (CNN)The Texas Supreme Court on Tuesday ruled in favor of Republican Gov.       Greg Abbott's order to limit mail-in ballot drop box locations to one site       per county, a decision that largely affects the Houston and Austin areas.              The court ruled that Abbott's order "provides Texas voters more ways to       vote in the November 3 election than does the Election Code" and that it       doesn't "disenfranchise anyone."              Opponents of Abbott's order had argued it exceeded the governor's       authority and also created an unjust burden on voters in larger counties       to travel far distances to drop off their ballots. Critics also argued it       increased voters' risk of contracting Covid-19.              READ: Texas Supreme Court ruling on limiting ballot drop boxes to one per       county              The court did not agree with the plaintiffs' argument that the governor's       order had exceeded his authority, nor that the order "severely" burdened       voters and their right to vote.              "The plaintiffs complain that limiting early hand-deliveries of mail-in       ballots to one office per county requires more travel time for some       voters. But this ignores the other options for casting their ballots that       these voters have," the opinion read. It noted that voters can also vote       in person for an expanded period of time than usual, drop off their mail-       in ballot in a 45-day window before Election Day rather than on November 3       only, and also mail in their ballots.              The court also argued the risk of mailing the ballot is "small," and       "voters who are worried about it can mail their ballots in plenty of time       before Election Day to eliminate the chance of untimely delivery."              In a statement Tuesday, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's office cheered       the ruling as having "correctly stopped the district court's unlawful       injunction and preserved election integrity."              "The 2020 general election is already underway and the integrity of our       election process must be protected and preserved," the statement       continued. "Governor Abbott's order rightfully bolsters the security of       dropped-off ballots."              A federal appeals court also sided with Abbott's order earlier this month.       While the issue made its way through the courts, Harris County -- which       had reduced its 12 drop-off locations to one -- and Travis County -- which       reduced its four drop-off locations to one -- continued to operate with       one site per county throughout the month.              Previously, a state judge wrote in a ruling that Abbott's order "would       likely needlessly and unreasonably increase risks of exposure to Covid-19       infections" and "substantially burden potential voters' constitutionally       protected rights to vote, as a consequence of increased travel and delays,       among other things." His ruling was upheld by a state court of appeals.              Tuesday's ruling comes as Texas' rapidly growing cities and inner suburbs       -- including the increasingly Democratic-leaning areas of Houston, Dallas,       Austin, San Antonio and Fort Worth -- have seen a massive surge of early       voting.              Just alone in Harris County, which is centered on Houston, 1.15 million       people had voted through Monday evening, compared with 1.3 million total       in the 2016 election. The state's other big cities and inner suburban       counties are experiencing comparable increases.              Early voting began in Texas on October 13, 12 days after Abbott issued the       order and with lines and hours-long wait times for thousands of voters at       some locations.              This story has been updated with additional reaction and details.                     https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/27/politics/texas-supreme-court-drop-       boxes/index.html              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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