Texas 2019 - 86th Regular

Texas House Bill HB1600 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 02/11/2019

                            86R4731 GRM-F
 By: Israel H.B. No. 1600


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to procedures for submitting a ballot to be voted by mail;
 creating an exception to the application of a criminal offense.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 86.006, Election Code, is amended by
 amending Subsections (a-1) and (f) to read as follows:
 (a-1)  The secretary of state shall prescribe a procedure for
 the delivery of [The voter may deliver] a marked ballot in person
 during the early voting period and on election day. The procedure
 must provide:
 (1)  for a person to deliver the marked ballot to:
 (A)  during the early voting period or while the
 polls are open on election day, the early voting clerk's office;
 (B)  during the early voting period, an election
 officer at an early voting polling place where the voter who marked
 the ballot is eligible to cast a ballot; or
 (C)  [only] while the polls are open on election
 day, an election officer at a polling place where the voter who
 marked the ballot is eligible to cast a ballot;
 (2)  for an election officer to accept a marked ballot
 delivered in person before accepting others offering to vote at the
 polling place who arrived before the person delivering the ballot;
 (3)  for the submission of a form prescribed by the
 secretary of state that includes the following information:
 (A)  the name, address, and signature of the voter
 who marked the ballot; and
 (B)  the name and address of the person delivering
 the ballot;
 (4)  a requirement that for each election a person may
 only deliver the person's own ballot and the ballot of one other
 voter; and
 (5)  that a person[. A voter] who delivers the person's
 own [a] marked ballot in person must present the documentation
 required under Section 63.001 [an acceptable form of identification
 described by Section 63.0101].
 (f)  A person commits an offense if the person knowingly
 possesses an official ballot or official carrier envelope provided
 under this code to another. Unless the person possessed the ballot
 or carrier envelope with intent to defraud the voter or the election
 authority, this subsection does not apply to a person who, on the
 date of the offense, was:
 (1)  related to the voter within the second degree by
 affinity or the third degree by consanguinity, as determined under
 Subchapter B, Chapter 573, Government Code;
 (2)  physically living in the same dwelling as the
 voter;
 (3)  an early voting clerk or a deputy early voting
 clerk;
 (4)  a person who possesses a ballot or carrier
 envelope solely for the purpose of lawfully assisting a voter who
 was eligible for assistance under Section 86.010 and complied fully
 with:
 (A)  Section 86.010; and
 (B)  Section 86.0051, if assistance was provided
 in order to deposit the envelope in the mail or with a common or
 contract carrier;
 (5)  an employee of the United States Postal Service
 working in the normal course of the employee's authorized duties;
 [or]
 (6)  a common or contract carrier working in the normal
 course of the carrier's authorized duties if the official ballot is
 sealed in an official carrier envelope that is accompanied by an
 individual delivery receipt for that particular carrier envelope;
 or
 (7)  a person delivering the ballot of one other voter
 under Subsection (a-1).
 SECTION 2.  The changes in law made by this Act apply only to
 an offense committed on or after the effective date of this Act. An
 offense committed before the effective date of this Act is governed
 by the law in effect on the date the offense was committed, and the
 former law is continued in effect for that purpose. For purposes of
 this section, an offense was committed before the effective date of
 this Act if any element of the offense occurred before that date.
 SECTION 3.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2019.