Tuesday, January 18, 2022

TX Blames Supply Chain Snarls Voter Registration Forms


The Texas Secretary of State's Office, is blaming Supply Chain issues, for a Shortage of Voter Registration Forms, after Bottlenecks caused Prices to Skyrocket Nationwide.

Sam Taylor, the Assistant Secretary of State for Communications, said Supply Chain snarls have driven up the Price of Paper, which will in turn caused the State to Distribute fewer Voter Registration Forms in preparation for November's Midterm Elections.

"We are limited in what we can supply this year, because of the paper shortage and the cost constraints due to the price of paper and the supply of paper." Taylor said.

The Secretary of State's Office, is now Limiting the Number of Registration Forms, Groups are able to Request. Each Organization can Only receive between 1,000 and 2,000 Registration Forms per ask, according to Taylor.

The Shortage, however, is occurring at a particularly Tenuous time for Texas, as Groups in the Lone Star State, work to Register Voters after a sweeping Elections Bill took effect in December.

Groups in Texas are Requesting New Voter Registration Forms because the Controversial Bill altered the Document. "The voter registration application changed this year for one reason: It's because the legislature decided to increase the penalty for illegal voter registration from a class B misdemeanor to a class A misdemeanor," Taylor said.

Taylor said the Secretary of State's Office has instructed Groups, that they should Not Distribute Old Versions of Voter Registration Forms, but County Registrars are Permitted to accept Old Applications, as long as they are "otherwise valid." "In other words, using last year's form in and of itself is not fatal to the voter's registration application," he added.

The Texas Voting Bill, which Gov. Greg Abbott (R) signed in September, enacted an Overhaul of Election Procedures. Abbott signed the Measure after Democrats in the Legislature fled Texas in an effort to Delay the Process for the Bill moving forward.

Among other Provisions the Legislation Prohibits: Round-the-Clock Polling Stations, Limits Drive-thru-Voting, and Voting-by-Mail. It also gives Partisan Poll Watchers more Authority and Increases Voter Identification Requirements.

Grace Chimene, the President of the League of Women Voters of Texas, said that it is Not uncommon for the Secretary of State's Office to Not be able to Fulfill All Application Requests, ahead of Elections, from Groups like hers.

She did, however, say the Shortage is styming her Efforts to Register Thousands of Citizens who were recently Naturalized.










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