Texas Legislature

Republicans Sue Abbott to Stop Extended Early Voting in Texas

Political circles were buzzing Wednesday with word of the latest episode of Republicans turning against their state leader, Gov. Greg Abbott. The governor is being sued for the simple act of extending the early voting period during the pandemic. 

The first plaintiff listed on the lawsuit is conservative activist Steve Hotze, who seems to run to court as often as the sun rises. His involvement is not surprising to those who’ve watched his moves over the last few months, however, political tongues are wagging over the long list of high-profile Republicans who have lined up behind him this time. They include Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller, Texas GOP Party Chair Allen West, Harris County Republican Party Chair Keith Nielsen, three state senators and four state representatives.

Shortly after the lawsuit became public, State Sen. Donna Campbell (R-New Braunfels) notified the plaintiffs that she had not agreed to be part of their lawsuit and wanted her name removed, Scott Braddock of the Quorum Report was the first to report.

Minus Campbell, there are a total of 23 plaintiffs.

The lawsuit claims Abbott is violating Texas election law and overstepping his authority in extending early voting without first consulting with the Texas Legislature. 

If ever a special session was justified, now is the time,” the filing reads. “Abbott’s executive orders are unprecedented and have had life and death implications, destroyed small businesses and families’ livelihoods, have had a crippling effect on every single community, and now have the ability to impact local, state and national elections. As long as this court allows it to occur, one person will continue to unilaterally make these decisions under the guise of an unconstitutional statute.”

Abbott extended early voting for the November election by nearly a week. He also expanded the period in which completed mail-in ballots may be delivered in person. Typically, mail ballots may be hand delivered only on Election Day. Abbott’s order allows in-person delivery every day of the early voting period. 

Hotze and company also want the court to enjoin Abbott from allowing the early delivery of mail ballots. 

The plaintiffs have bypassed the lower courts and filed their case directly with the Texas Supreme Court. 

Early voting is scheduled for Oct. 13-30. Election Day is Nov. 3. 

RA Staff

Written by RA News staff.

Recent Posts

Families of Camp Mystic Victims Push for New Safety Laws

Families of the 27 campers and counselors who lost their lives in the July 4…

11 hours ago

Texas Democrats Return as O’Rourke Faces Legal Fight Over PAC Donations

As Texas Democrats staged a quorum break to block new congressional maps, former U.S. Rep.…

11 hours ago

Influencers and Podcasters Drive Huge Spike in Live Event Ticket Sales

Social media personalities, podcast hosts, and authors are turning online influence into in-person fan engagement…

2 days ago

Kelly Clarkson Steps Away from Texas Flood Benefit After Ex-Husband’s Passing

Kelly Clarkson will no longer perform at this weekend’s Band Together Texas benefit concert, stepping…

3 days ago

Judge Lina Hidalgo Dubs Colleagues the ‘GOP Three’

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo escalated tensions at Commissioners Court on Thursday, branding two of…

4 days ago

Texas Democrats Plan Return to Block Gerrymander, Awaiting End of Special Session

Dozens of Texas Democratic lawmakers are preparing to head back to Austin early next week…

4 days ago

This website uses cookies.