Early Voting Ends On Friday
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Texans who wish to vote early in the Nov. 5 general election have until closing time Friday, Nov. 1 to do so. Secretary of State Jane Nelson is encouraging voters to double-check their precinct numbers and candidate selections before casting their ballots.
“Texas has more than 18 million registered voters, and we want to make sure every eligible vote counts. All voting systems in Texas are designed to give voters an opportunity to review their selections before casting their ballot,” Nelson said. “I encourage Texas voters to use this built-in opportunity to doublecheck the selections.”
Voters can go to votetexas. gov to ensure they are registered, though the deadline to do so for the general election has passed. The site also lists polling places and what is on the ballot, depending on where you live.
Voting officials have taken steps to ensure ballots remain secret. Earlier this year, a conservative news site published what it claimed was a copy of then-GOP chair Matt Rinaldi’s ballot, using public records released by election administrators.
The Houston Chronicle reported that Nelson and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton subsequently issued emergency guidelines to election officials to exercise caution about what type of information they release to the public. Voting records are public records, though who someone specifically voted for is not. Officials have noted identifying a voter’s choices was only possible in very limited circumstances, such as a precinct with very few voters.
Lawmakers, Paxton Spar Over Inmate Execution
A bipartisan group of 84 Texas legislators earlier this month subpoenaed a man on Death Row in an effort to stop his execution for the death of his 2-year-old daughter. Atty. Gen. Ken Paxton took issue with the move, claiming that the lawmakers ignored glaring evidence of Robert Roberson’s guilt, The Dallas Morning News reported.
The unique attempt came among increasing concern that Roberson was convicted of “shaken baby syndrome,” which is now widely discredited by science experts. The case is now being reviewed by the Texas Supreme Court, which is considering the question of whether a legislative subpoena outweighs the executive branch’s authority to conduct an execution. Lawmakers heard from a number of experts, as well as the lead investigator and a juror. Paxton “issued a stunningly misleading statement designed to quash a bipartisan group of lawmakers in their truth-seeking mission, which has riveted the world,” Roberson’s attorney, Gretchen Sween, said in a statement.
The House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee has held two hearings on Roberson’s case. Roberson, who has been diagnosed with autism, did not testify after the attorney general’s office said he could only do so by teleconference.