Spring - Klein Edition | September 2022

SOURCES: HARRIS COUNTY ELECTIONS ADMINISTRATOR’S OFFICE, TEXAS SECRETARY OF STATE‰ COMMUNITY IMPACT NEWSPAPER Errors cited in rejected mail-in ballots include failure to provide ID numbers on applications and numbers not matching on ballots. Those without an acceptable ID can vote if none of the required ID numbers are found in registration records. Notice is provided if applications or ballots are rejected.

laws included in SB 1, a voting reform bill that was approved by the Texas Legislature. Sam Taylor, assistant secretary of state for Communications, said he believes the decline in mail-in ballot rejection rates from March to May can be attributed to voters adjusting to the voting changes. However, Taylor said the addi- tion of reconciliation reports—which require counties to compare the num- ber of voters who cast valid ballots with the number of votes counted by their tabulation system—has added a new layer of transparency. “The reconciliation form that was added in SB 1 has been the biggest help for our oŠce in terms of hunting down any issues that we see in the reporting of results,” Taylor said. Since 2015, the state has success- fully prosecuted 155 individuals for election fraud o‘enses, according to the Texas attorney general’s oŠce. While the new voting-by-mail regu- lations were approved to reduce the potential for fraudulent voting, local election oŠcials and policy experts said the regulations have added hur- dles for individuals who vote by mail. While the state and Harris County saw decreases in mail-in ballot rejec- tions from March’s primary election to elections held in May, Renee Cross, senior director of the Hobby School of Public A‘airs at the University of Houston, said she believes the e‘ect of SB 1 might not be completely visi- ble until the November election. “Just like any primary election in Texas, voter turnout is relatively low,” Cross said. “I don’t think we’re going to see the full e‘ect of these laws until you have a statewide general elec- tion, which of course we will have in November.” Mail-in ballot rejections To be eligible to vote by mail in

REJECTION RATES

STEP 1

STEP 2

SAMPLE MAILIN BALLOT APPLICATION

SAMPLE MAILIN BALLOT

Texas Driver’s License, Texas Personal Identication Number or Election Identication Certicate Number issued by the Department of Public Safety (NOT your voter registration Voter Unique Identier Number) You must provide one of the following numbers:

FOLD LINE

Signature

If you do not have a Texas Driver’s License, a Texas Personal Identication Number or a Texas Election Identication Certicate Number, give the last four digits of your Social Security number.

Required information: You must provide one of the following:

Driver's license, personal ID or election ID

Last four digits of Social Security number

I have not been issued a driver's license or ID

I have not been issued a Texas Driver’s License/ Texas Personal Identication Number/Texas Election Identication Certicate or Social Security Number

Phone: OPTIONAL CONTACT INFORMATION: Email:

Texas driver’s license number Texas state ID number Last four digits of their Social Security number Election ID certicate number APPLICATION REQUIREMENT: ID NUMBERS Senate Bill 1 requires individuals who vote by mail to include one of the following identication numbers on their applications:

Provide optional contact information to expedite the correction process. Visit www.votetexas.gov/voting-by-mail/track-my-ballot.html to track ballot status and correct errors on ballots. BALLOT REQUIREMENT: MATCHING ID NUMBERS Senate Bill 1 requires individuals who vote by mail to include the same number submitted on their applications on their ballots. Election o˜cials o™ered mail-in ballot voters the following tips:

Leah Shah, the director of commu- nications and voter outreach for the Harris County elections administra- tor’s oŠce, said the “historic rate” of mail-in ballot rejections was a big challenge for the county during the March and May primaries. “There are new requirements under the law that require di‘erent infor- mation, including Texas ID or Social Security,” Shah said. “We found that a lot of people who were •lling the forms out both for the application and the return ballot were missing those required •elds, and that created a kind of a domino e‘ect of rejections.”

Statewide, 24,636 mail-in ballots were rejected in the March 1 primary election—roughly 12.4% of all mail-in ballots submitted, according to state data. According to a 2021 U.S. Election Assistance Commission report, Texas rejected roughly 8,300, or about 0.8%, of the nearly 1 million mail-in ballots cast in the 2020 presidential election. Although mail-in ballot rejec- tions surged in March, in the two elections held since then, the num- ber of rejected mail-in ballots declined, according to state data. The new regulations surrounding mail-in voting are one of many

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The rates were seen in elections held six to eight months after Senate Bill 1 added new voting requirements to Texas elections. increased rejection The number of mail-in ballots rejected in Harris County skyrocketed following the passage of SB 1 in Sep- tember 2021, jumping from 135 mail-in ballot rejections during the Nov. 6, 2018, midterm election to about 6,900 rejected ballots in the March 1 primary election, according to Harris County Elections Administrator’s OŠce data.

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