Last updated on January 23rd, 2025 at 12:03 pm
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An effort by some Republican officials to curb access to early voting on college campuses in Tarrant County failed Thursday, after the Tarrant County Commissioners Court voted to keep the polling sites in place.
The push to limit the voting locations was led by Judge Tim OโHare, a Republican and the chief elected official of the county. He said the measure was intended to save money because those poll locations had low voter turnout. Democrats on the commissionersโ court and local voting rights advocates called the effort an attempt at voter suppression targeted at people of color and younger voters who tend to be more liberal.
OโHare has said it isnโt the countyโs job to make it easier for specific groups to vote.
The two-week debate culminated in a 4-1 vote in favor of a list of polling locations that instead added a new site. OโHare, who as county judge gets a vote on the commission, was the only vote against.
The vote will allow polling locations to remain at several locations, including at the University of Texas at Arlington and Tarrant County College campuses. Early voting runs from Oct. 21 through Nov. 1. Election Day is Nov. 5.
Tarrant County GOP Chair Bo French condemned the vote in a social media post and promised that grassroots GOP voters and activists would not โforget which of our elected officials stood with them and which of them chose to side with the Leftist mob.โ
In a newsletter last week, French wrote that reducing polling sites would be โa serious win for Republicans in Tarrant County.โ
The voter access debate in Tarrant County โ Texasโ largest swing county โ comes as top GOP leaders have tried to block county efforts to increase voter registration and spread unproven claims of illegal voting for the past few weeks. Election experts say theyโre worried those efforts could undermine trust in state elections and lead to voter suppression.
Texas House Democrats, students, and community leaders spoke out against the effort at a news conference Wednesday at the University of Texas at Arlington, calling it a conservative power grab.
โ[Republicans] see Tarrant County and Texas slipping away from them,โ said State Rep. Chris Turner, a Democrat from Grand Prairie. โTheyโre desperately trying to cling to power.โ
About 10% of the ballots in Tarrant County during early voting in the 2020 presidential election were cast on college campuses, according to the countyโs data. The UT-Arlington early voting location had 9,754 votes cast in that election, in which President Joe Biden became the first Democratic presidential candidate to win Tarrant County since Lyndon B. Johnson.
Beto OโRourke won the county in his failed 2018 bid to unseat U.S. Sen.Ted Cruz.
Texas has the second youngest median age of any state other than Utah. Vice President Kamala Harrisโ entry into the presidential race has helped activate Texasโ young voters, which political experts say could help close the enthusiasm gap between Democrats and Republicans in the state.
Rogelio Meixuerio, a student at UT-Arlington, said heโs glad OโHareโs effort failed, but he still worried whatโs happening in Tarrant County could embolden Republican leaders in other counties.
โOโHare is working to keep Tarrant County under Republican control,โ Meixuerio said.
Derek Tisler, senior counsel at the Brennan Center for Justiceโs Voting Rights Program, said removing early voting locations and having fewer of them could significantly increase wait times on Election Day.
โElection administration involves a lot of careful planning, and disruptions like this have unintended consequences and spillover effects on all voters throughout the community,โ he said.
This isnโt the first time Republicans have had issues with college voting locations. During the last legislative session, Republican state lawmakers tried to pass a bill that banned counties from putting any polling locations on college campuses.
Amber Mills, an organizer with MOVE Texas, a nonpartisan voting advocacy group, said removing campus sites would negatively affect students with disabilities or without reliable transportation. Arlington is the largest city in the state without public transit.
Claudia Yoli Ferla, executive director of MOVE Texas, celebrated the county commissionersโ vote on Thursday.
โColleges and universities are key community institutions that provide accessible facilities for the public. We are excited that UTA students will continue to have a reliable, central location to cast their ballots safely,โ she said. โYoung voters have consistently turned out in high record numbers. Their energy and dedication to our democracy are undeniable and show no signs of slowing down.โ
Meixuerio said heโs now more energized than ever to get more students registered to vote.
โI donโt care who people vote for,โ Meixuerio said. โI just want them to vote.โ
Juan Salinas II is a Texas Tribune reporting fellow based in Arlington.
The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.
This article was originally published by Votebeat, a nonprofit news organization covering local election administration and voting access.