Sep 5, 2024
Texas AG Is SUING To Stop People From Registering To Vote
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is suing to stop voter registration applications from being sent to prospective voters.
- 9 minutes
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton
has filed a lawsuit in an effort
to stop county officials from sending out
voter registration applications
to people who are currently unregistered.
This is in Bexar County, and so this is
the latest group that Ken Paxton has
[00:00:20]
targeted regarding voter access or making
it easier for people to register and vote.
So just last month, Paxton's office
ended up raiding several Democratic Party
workers homes south of San Antonio
to allegedly expose election fraud.
[00:00:36]
Here's more on that.
AG Ken Paxton's office says these
undercover operations were happening
in response to reports that
organizations in Texas may be
unlawfully registering noncitizens to vote
or engaging in ballot harvesting.
[00:00:52]
But the League of United Latin
American Citizens or or LULAC
is denouncing the raids as, quote,
point blank voter intimidation.
The CEO of LULAC was on America Decides
yesterday and said that this is a pattern
that Paxton has been pursuing
to keep Latinos from voting.
[00:01:11]
He's gone beyond the pale.
He's going after individual individuals.
LULAC members, Latino leaders, civic
leaders, essentially in their community
that are doing what they should be doing,
which is engaging Latinos who are
eligible to vote in these elections.
[00:01:28]
So, also, The New York Times reported,
last month that Paxton said that he
was looking into whether there were groups
in the state that had been registering
undocumented immigrants to vote.
He did not provide a shred of evidence for
why he believed that that was happening.
[00:01:47]
And he also established an email tip line
for the public to report suspected
violations of Texas election law.
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Now let's fast forward
to what's happening now.
Now, commissioners from Bexar County
approved a plan this week to pay civic
government solutions to send more
than 200,000 forms to residents one month
[00:02:24]
before the Texas registration deadline.
And of course, this is the registration
deadline to register to vote.
Now, according to the Washington Post,
this is the first time county leaders
have contracted an outside company
to send unsolicited registration forms
to residents in an effort
[00:02:42]
to basically boost voter participation.
Paxton initially offered a warning
to county leaders regarding this decision,
and even threatened legal action if they
went through with their plan to work
with this third party with this vendor
[00:02:57]
Paxton argues that it's illegal for county
officials to arrange for unsolicited mass
mailing of voter registration forms,
but the commissioners voted on this.
They voted 3 to 1 on Tuesday
to approve the proposal, and they argue
[00:03:13]
that they have not broken the law.
They have not done anything wrong.
Paxton is seeking an emergency order
to block this plan,
which he derided as an effort by Democrats
to boost their own numbers.
He said it will create confusion,
facilitate fraud, undermine confidence
[00:03:29]
in elections and is illegal.
He also argued it will worsen
existing voter registration backlogs,
and that the firm hired has known ties
to Democratic causes and candidates,
according to the lawsuit.
So again, this is from the suit
that Ken Paxton filed against this effort.
[00:03:48]
And he's also threatening
a similar suit in Harris County.
This is where Houston is, where officials
are weighing a similar effort to increase
voter registration and turnout.
So, Jake, I'm curious what you think about
all of it, actually, like hiring a third
[00:04:06]
party to send registration forms out.
Ken Paxton's effort to stop it.
What are your thoughts?
Yeah.
So, first of all, absolutely outrageous.
So you of course, you can register voters.
So you're going to block
all registrations of voters.
[00:04:22]
And let me guess, only in democratic
areas, because you're concerned that some
of those might not be real voters.
So can I register anybody?
So if you're going to block 200,000,
are you going to block 20,000?
2002 under that logic,
you wouldn't register anyone to vote.
[00:04:37]
It's absurd.
So then they ask Ken Paxton,
okay, well, do you have any evidence
that this group has done anything wrong
or that they've registered someone
that is not a US citizen?
And he says, no, I don't.
So then what are you doing?
Well, I don't want him
to register those people.
Look, if you don't know,
Ken Paxton is a literal criminal.
[00:04:55]
He has committed so many crimes
and is wanted for them.
He's ironically hiding out
as the Attorney General of Texas
and is not charging himself.
I mean, it's just it's a joke.
Texas is a totally run
by gangsters and so.
And gangsters makes them sound too cool.
[00:05:12]
And and even the fellow Republicans
try to get rid of Ken Paxton.
And then Trump said, I like Ken Paxton.
And then they backed away
because they're like, oh, okay.
The dear Lord has spoken.
And remember,
Donald Trump is a lifelong criminal.
So of course,
he backed Ken Paxton, the criminal.
[00:05:27]
And then the other Texas Republicans
were like, okay, never mind, never mind.
So in this case, they said, well,
you know, there might be some that were
registered as, that were undocumented.
And then they give a number
in another instance that's less than 1%
of the number we're talking about here.
[00:05:43]
So you shouldn't register 99% of people
in case 1% might be undocumented guys.
If somebody that's undocumented
and they vote, that is a crime
and you should pursue that crime.
It doesn't mean you shouldn't
ever register anyone to vote.
This is nothing but a lie
by Republicans trying to make sure they
[00:06:01]
suppress the vote before the election,
which is how they usually cheat.
Not after the election,
like Donald Trump tried.
So there's more on this.
So what is this really about?
Well, the dispute comes as tensions
between officials in large Democratic
[00:06:17]
leaning cities within Texas, are taking
place with the state Republican leaders.
So, you know, Texas is a really
interesting state because there are parts
of Texas that are more Democratic leaning.
I remember, you know,
just a few election cycles ago,
[00:06:34]
there were questions about whether
Texas would turn into a swing state.
And there are some real efforts here
by Republican leaders
to kind of fight back against that.
The Washington Post also notes that Paxton
and GOP lawmakers for years have sought
to curb local control of elections,
[00:06:51]
which I find hilarious
because a common talking point that you
will hear from Republicans is that like
the federal government shouldn't have any
control over how the state or how,
you know,
we carry out elections on a local level.
But in this case, you have state officials
from the Republican Party
[00:07:08]
trying to curb counties
in how they carry out their elections.
However, Democrats in the state
believe that the real goal
is to basically suppress voters
in areas where they say demographics
do not favor the Republican Party.
[00:07:23]
Also, keep in mind that Texas is one of
the few states without online or automatic
voter registration, so registering to vote
in Texas is a little more challenging.
And it seems like this group that's trying
to increase voter registration
is just trying to make it easier
for potential voters to register,
[00:07:41]
and it's unlikely that this case
will go anywhere because, according
to Bexar County Commissioner Justin
Rodriguez, they did nothing wrong.
Rodriguez, who brought the idea
to local leaders, said there was nothing
nefarious about being proactive
in increasing voter participation.
[00:07:58]
The commissioners attorney
told them the plan was legal, he said.
And so, look, you have Paxton
filing this lawsuit.
Let's see how it plays out in the courts.
But it is amazing to me that just the very
act of registering more people to vote
[00:08:14]
automatically makes Republican leaders
think, oh, that means that they want
undocumented immigrants to vote.
Like, you need to provide identification
when you register to vote.
Do people know that?
I don't think most people realize
that when they like, you know, people who
[00:08:30]
are supportive of like the voter ID laws,
they seem to be under the impression
that people who vote have never shown ID
throughout any of the process.
You have to show ID
when you register to vote.
Yeah, no, they don't know that.
And the last couple of things here,
number one,
if they were really worried about this,
why didn't they do it in Republican areas?
[00:08:48]
Why are they only blocking registration
in Democratic areas?
Okay. So this is obvious horse crap.
And in case you don't know
what I was referring to earlier,
Attorney General Ken Paxton was actually
impeached by the Texas House,
[00:09:05]
led by Republicans.
70% of them voted for impeachment
because of corruption and bribery.
And then after Donald Trump's tweet, oh,
no, the Senate panicked and acquitted him.
But he's definitely a crook.
I wouldn't believe a word he said.
[00:09:21]
Texas reminds me of, like, those
old Western movies where the bad guys,
take over a town and then they give
themselves sheriff and deputy badges.
But everybody's screwed because they know
it's the bad guys that have the badges.
That's what Texas is right now.
[00:09:37]
So this is massive cheating
by the Republicans that run Texas to try
to block registration in Democratic areas.
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