Texas 2021 - 87th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB1215 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 03/09/2021

                            87R10813 ADM-F
 By: Buckingham S.B. No. 1215


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to election practices and procedures; creating a criminal
 offense; creating a civil penalty.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Subchapter A, Chapter 31, Election Code, is
 amended by adding Section 31.0035 to read as follows:
 Sec. 31.0035.  UNIFORM ELECTION PROCEDURES. (a) The
 secretary of state shall prescribe model election procedures for
 use by election officials in conducting elections, and shall
 publish the procedures not later than January 1 of each
 even-numbered year.
 (b)  The procedures prescribed under Subsection (a) may
 provide different procedures for counties based on population.
 (c)  The state elections tribunal under Subchapter F,
 Chapter 273, may prescribe temporary and emergency amendments to
 the procedures prescribed under Subsection (a).
 (d)  Deviations from the procedures published under
 Subsection (a) are presumptively invalid and subject to injunctive
 relief under Section 273.081, unless an election official first
 seeks and obtains written permission from the state elections
 tribunal prior to implementation.
 (e)  The attorney general may enforce this section by seeking
 injunctive relief.
 SECTION 2.  Section 31.014, Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 31.014.  CERTIFICATION OF ELECTRONIC DEVICES TO ACCEPT
 VOTERS. (a) The secretary of state shall prescribe specific
 requirements and standards, consistent with this code, for the
 certification of an electronic device used to accept voters under
 Chapter 63 that require the device to:
 (1)  produce an electronic copy of the list of voters
 who were accepted to vote for delivery to the election judge after
 the polls close;
 (2)  display the voter's original signature in
 accordance with Section 63.002;
 (3)  accept a voter for voting even when the device is
 off-line;
 (4)  provide the full list of voters registered in the
 county with an indication of the jurisdictional or distinguishing
 number for each territorial unit in which each voter resides;
 (5)  time-stamp when each voter is accepted at a
 polling place, including the voter's unique identifier;
 (6)  if the county participates in the countywide
 polling place program under Section 43.007 or has more than one
 early voting polling place, transmit a time stamp when each voter is
 accepted, including the voter's unique identifier, to all polling
 place locations;
 (7)  time-stamp the receipt of a transmission under
 Subdivision (6); and
 (8)  produce in an electronic format capable of
 updating in real time and compatible with the statewide voter
 registration list under Section 18.061 data for retention and
 transfer that includes:
 (A)  the polling location in which the device was
 used;
 (B)  the dated time stamp under Subdivision (5);
 and
 (C)  the dated time stamp under Subdivision (7).
 (b)  A device described by this section must:
 (1)  be certified annually by the secretary of state;
 and
 (2)  perform a diagnosis on each startup to ensure
 functionality and connectivity.
 (c)  The secretary of state shall adopt rules that require a
 device described by this section used during the early voting
 period or under the countywide polling place program under Section
 43.007 to update data in real time. The rules adopted under this
 section must ensure any wireless connection used to update data is
 secure and that data are not transmitted or stored on any medium
 located outside the state. A [If a] county may not use [uses] a
 device that does not comply with the rules [rule in two consecutive
 general elections for state and county officers, the secretary of
 state shall assess a noncompliance fee. The noncompliance fee
 shall be set at an amount determined by secretary of state rule].
 SECTION 3.  Sections 32.002(d), (e), and (g), Election Code,
 are amended to read as follows:
 (d)  The state [county clerk, after making a reasonable
 effort to consult with the] party chair of the appropriate
 political party [or parties,] shall submit [to the commissioners
 court] a list of names of persons eligible for appointment as
 presiding judge and alternate presiding judge if notified by the
 county clerk that the county chair has failed to make a list [for
 each precinct in which an appointment is not made] under Subsection
 (c). The commissioners court shall appoint an eligible person from
 the list who is affiliated or aligned with the appropriate party, if
 available.
 (e)  The commissioners court shall fill a vacancy in the
 position of presiding judge or alternate presiding judge for the
 remainder of the unexpired term. An appointment to fill a vacancy
 may be made at any regular or special term of court. Not later than
 48 hours after the county clerk becomes aware of a vacancy, the
 county clerk shall notify the county chair of the same political
 party with which the original judge was affiliated or aligned of the
 vacancy in writing. Not later than the fifth day after the date of
 notification of the vacancy, the county chair of the same political
 party with which the original judge was affiliated or aligned shall
 submit to the commissioners court in writing the name of a person
 who is eligible for the appointment. If a name is submitted in
 compliance with this subsection, the commissioners court shall
 appoint that person to the unexpired term. If a name is not
 submitted in compliance with this subsection, the county clerk
 shall notify the state chair of the appropriate political party in
 writing not later than 48 hours after the county chair's failure to
 submit a name. The state chair shall, not later than the fifth day
 after receiving notice, submit to the commissioners court a list of
 names of persons eligible as an appointee for the unexpired term.
 The commissioners court shall appoint an eligible person from the
 list who is affiliated or aligned with the same party, if available.
 (g)  Following an oral warning to the election judge and with
 the written concurrence of the county chair of the same political
 party with which the judge is affiliated or aligned, the county
 clerk may remove, replace, or reassign an election judge who causes
 a disruption in a polling location or wilfully disobeys the
 provisions of this code. An election judge may not be removed
 except as provided by this section. A vacancy created under this
 subsection shall be filled in the same manner as an emergency
 appointment under Section 32.007.
 SECTION 4.  Section 32.007(f), Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (f)  A person who is appointed as a replacement for a judge
 originally appointed under Section 32.002 must appear on a list
 submitted to the appointing authority by the county chair of [be
 affiliated or aligned with] the same political party as was the
 original judge. If the county chair does not submit the list
 required by this subsection, or the list, including any
 supplements, does not include sufficient names to make an
 appointment, [if possible, and] the appointing authority shall
 [make a reasonable effort to] consult with the state party chair of
 the appropriate political party before making an appointment under
 this section.
 SECTION 5.  Section 32.031(a), Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (a)  Except as provided by Section 32.034, the [The]
 presiding judge for each election precinct shall appoint the
 election clerks to assist the judge in the conduct of an election at
 the polling place served by the judge.
 SECTION 6.  Section 32.034, Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 32.034.  CLERKS FOR ELECTIONS FOR FEDERAL, STATE, AND
 COUNTY OFFICES. (a) The clerks for the general election for state
 and county officers or for a special election to fill a vacancy in
 an office regularly filled at the general election shall be
 selected in accordance with this section [from different political
 parties if possible].
 (b)  The presiding judge shall appoint clerks affiliated
 with the same political party as the presiding judge. The alternate
 [county chair of a political party whose candidate for governor
 received the highest or second highest number of votes in the county
 in the most recent gubernatorial general election may, not later
 than the 25th day before a general election or the 10th day before a
 special election to which Subsection (a) applies, submit to a
 presiding judge a list containing the names of at least two persons
 who are eligible for appointment as a clerk. If a timely list is
 submitted, the] presiding judge shall appoint clerks affiliated
 with the same political party as the alternate presiding judge. The
 same number of clerks must be appointed by the presiding judge and
 the alternate presiding judge [at least one clerk from the list],
 except as provided by Subsection (c).
 (c)  If either the presiding judge or the alternate presiding
 judge fails to appoint their respective clerks, the county chair of
 the same political party as the judge who failed to appoint clerks
 [only one additional clerk is to be appointed for an election in
 which the alternate presiding judge will serve as a clerk, the clerk
 shall be appointed from the list of a political party with which
 neither the presiding judge nor the alternate judge is affiliated
 or aligned, if such a list is submitted. If two such lists are
 submitted, the presiding judge shall decide from which list the
 appointment will be made. If such a list is not submitted, the
 presiding judge is not required to make an appointment from any
 list.
 [(d)  The presiding judge shall make an appointment under
 this section not later than the fifth day after the date the judge
 receives the list and shall deliver written notification of the
 appointment to the appropriate county chair.
 [(e)  If a presiding judge has not been appointed at the time
 the county chair of a political party is required to submit a list
 of names for the appointment of a clerk under this section, the list
 of names shall be submitted to the county chair of the political
 party whose candidate for governor received the most votes in the
 precinct in the most recent gubernatorial election and to the
 commissioners court. The county chair], or the commissioners court
 in a county without a county chair, shall appoint clerks [from the
 list] in the same manner provided for a presiding judge or alternate
 presiding judge, as applicable, to appoint clerks by this section.
 (d) [(f)]  Following an oral warning to the election clerk
 [and with the concurrence of the county chair of the same political
 party with which the election clerk is affiliated or aligned], the
 presiding judge, or alternate presiding judge, as applicable, of
 the same political party as the election [county] clerk may remove,
 replace, or reassign an election clerk who causes a disruption in a
 polling location or wilfully disobeys the provisions of this code.
 A vacancy created under this subsection shall be filled by the
 presiding judge, or alternate presiding judge, as applicable, of
 the same political party as the removed election clerk, who shall
 appoint a replacement election clerk who is affiliated or aligned
 with the same political party as the original clerk, if possible.
 SECTION 7.  Section 33.006, Election Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (d) to read as follows:
 (d)  A certificate of appointment may be completed
 electronically, including the signature of the appointing
 authority.
 SECTION 8.  Section 33.051, Election Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (g) to read as follows:
 (g)  An election officer commits an offense if the officer
 knowingly refuses to accept a watcher for service whose acceptance
 is required by this code. An offense under this section is a Class A
 misdemeanor.
 SECTION 9.  Section 33.056, Election Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (e) to read as follows:
 (e)  Except as provided by Section 33.057(b), a watcher may
 not be denied free movement within the location at which the watcher
 is serving.
 SECTION 10.  Subchapter C, Chapter 33, Election Code, is
 amended by adding Section 33.062 to read as follows:
 Sec. 33.062.  INJUNCTIVE RELIEF. A watcher, or the
 appointing authority for a watcher, is entitled to injunctive
 relief under Section 273.081 to enforce this chapter, including
 issuance of temporary orders.
 SECTION 11.  Section 34.001, Election Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (e) to read as follows:
 (e)  The secretary of state shall provide adequate training
 and supervision to state inspectors.
 SECTION 12.  Section 43.031(b), Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  Each polling place shall be located inside a building. A
 polling place may not be located in a tent or other temporary
 moveable structure, or in a facility primarily designed for motor
 vehicles. No voter may cast a vote from inside a motor vehicle
 unless the voter meets the requirements of Section 64.009.
 SECTION 13.  Section 64.009, Election Code, is amended by
 amending Subsection (b) and adding Subsections (b-1) and (e) to
 read as follows:
 (b)  The regular voting procedures, except those in
 Subchapter B, may be modified by the election officer to the extent
 necessary to conduct voting under this section.
 (b-1)  A person other than the voter is only permitted to be
 inside the motor vehicle while the voter votes if the person would
 be entitled to accompany the voter to the voting station under other
 law.
 (e)  Except as provided by Section 33.057, a poll watcher is
 entitled to observe any activity conducted under this section.
 SECTION 14.  Section 67.004(a), Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (a)  At the time set for convening the canvassing authority
 for the local canvass, the general custodian of election records
 [presiding officer of the canvassing authority] shall deliver the
 sealed precinct returns to the authority along with a report
 detailing any discrepancies between the number of names of voters
 who voted and the number of votes counted and the reasons for those
 discrepancies. The authority shall open the returns for each
 precinct and canvass them as provided by this section. Two members
 of the authority constitute a quorum for purposes of canvassing an
 election.
 SECTION 15.  Section 83.031, Election Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (d) to read as follows:
 (d)  A deputy early voting clerk may not serve at a main early
 voting polling place or branch polling place where election
 officers are appointed under Section 85.009 without the permission
 of both the presiding and alternate presiding judge at that polling
 place.
 SECTION 16.  Section 85.009, Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 85.009.  ELECTION OFFICERS FOR GENERAL ELECTION FOR
 STATE AND COUNTY OFFICERS. (a) The county clerk shall select
 election officers for the main early voting polling place and any
 branch polling place from a list provided under Subsection (b), in a
 manner that provides equal representation to the extent possible
 for each political party holding a primary election in the county.
 The county clerk shall provide notice in writing of the selections
 for each early voting polling place to the county chair of each
 political party holding a primary election.
 (b)  Before July of each year, the county chair of each
 political party holding a primary election in the county shall
 submit in writing to the county clerk a list of names of persons in
 order of preference for each early voting polling place who are
 eligible for selection as an election officer. The county chair may
 supplement the list of names of persons until the 30th day before
 early voting begins in case an appointed election officer becomes
 unable to serve. The county clerk shall appoint the first person
 meeting the applicable eligibility requirements from the list
 submitted in compliance with this subsection by the party with the
 highest number of votes in the county as the presiding judge of that
 polling place and the first person meeting the applicable
 eligibility requirements from the list submitted in compliance with
 this subsection by the party with the second highest number of votes
 in the county as the alternate presiding judge of that polling
 place. The county clerk shall appoint additional election officers
 for each polling place in a [the] manner that provides equal
 representation to the extent possible for each political party
 holding a primary election in the county and notify the county
 chairs of those political parties of the appointments in writing
 [described by Subsection (a)]. The county clerk may reject the list
 if the persons whose names are submitted on the list are determined
 not to meet the applicable eligibility requirements. If a list is
 not submitted by a county chair or is rejected in accordance with
 this section, the county clerk shall notify the state chair of the
 appropriate political party, who shall, not later than the fifth
 day after being notified in writing, submit a list from which the
 appropriate election officers shall be selected.
 (c)  After an oral warning to the election officer and with
 the written concurrence of the county chair of the same political
 party with which the election officer is affiliated or aligned, the
 county clerk may remove, replace, or reassign an election officer
 who causes a disruption in a polling location or wilfully violates a
 provision of this code. An election officer may not be removed
 except as provided by this section [The county clerk, after making a
 reasonable effort to consult with the party chair of the
 appropriate political party or parties, may select election
 officers for each early voting polling place in which a list is not
 submitted in a manner that attempts to ensure equal representation
 to the extent possible for the parties holding a primary election in
 the county].
 SECTION 17.  Section 85.061(a), Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (a)  In a countywide election in which the county clerk is
 the early voting clerk under Section 83.002, an early voting
 polling place shall be located inside [at] each branch office that
 is regularly maintained for conducting general clerical functions
 of the county clerk, except as provided by Subsection (b). If a
 suitable room is unavailable inside the branch office, the polling
 place may be located in another room inside the same building as the
 branch office. The polling place may not be located in a tent or
 other temporary movable structure or a parking garage, parking lot,
 or similar facility designed primarily for motor vehicles.
 SECTION 18.  Section 85.062(b), Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  A polling place established under this section may be
 located, subject to Subsection (d), at any place in the territory
 served by the early voting clerk and may be located inside [in] any
 building [stationary structure] as directed by the authority
 establishing the branch office. The polling place may not be
 located in a tent or other temporary movable structure or a parking
 garage, parking lot, or similar facility designed primarily for
 motor vehicles in the general election for state and county
 officers, general primary election, or runoff primary election.
 Ropes or other suitable objects may be used at the polling place to
 ensure compliance with Section 62.004. Persons who are not
 expressly permitted by law to be in a polling place shall be
 excluded from the polling place to the extent practicable.
 SECTION 19.  Section 87.002, Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 87.002.  COMPOSITION OF BOARD. (a) The early voting
 ballot board consists of a presiding judge, an alternate presiding
 judge, and at least two other members.
 (b)  Except as provided by Subsection (d), the presiding
 judge is appointed in the same manner as a presiding election judge
 and the alternate presiding judge is appointed in the same manner as
 an alternate presiding election judge. Except as provided by
 Subsection (c), the other members are appointed by the presiding
 judge in the same manner as the precinct election clerks.
 (c)  In the general election for state and county officers,
 each county chair of a political party with nominees on the general
 election ballot shall submit to the county election board a list of
 names of persons eligible to serve on the early voting ballot board.
 The county election board shall appoint at least one person from
 each list to serve as a member of the early voting ballot board. The
 same number of members must be appointed from each list.
 (c-1)  A member, once appointed, may not be removed without
 the written consent of the county chair of the political party the
 member is affiliated with. Any vacancy on the early voting ballot
 board must be immediately filled by appointment of the appropriate
 county chair to ensure an equal number of members from each list,
 including any supplements, are appointed.
 (d)  In addition to the members appointed under Subsection
 (c), the county election board shall appoint the presiding judge
 from the list provided under that subsection by the political party
 whose nominee for governor received the most votes in the county in
 the most recent gubernatorial general election and an alternate
 presiding judge from the list provided under that subsection by the
 political party whose nominee for governor received the second
 highest number of votes in the county in the most recent
 gubernatorial general election.
 (e)  The presiding judge and the alternate presiding judge
 shall be responsible for supervising the work of the members
 representing their respective political parties. To the extent
 practicable, every task carried out by the early voting ballot
 board shall be conducted by an equal number of representatives from
 each political party.
 SECTION 20.  Section 124.062, Election Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (d) to read as follows:
 (d)  Each electronic system ballot must contain a serial
 number that must be printed before insertion in a ballot marking
 device, if any. The secretary of state may not waive this
 requirement.
 SECTION 21.  Section 125.008, Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 125.008.  DEPOSITING THE BALLOT. (a) A voter shall
 deposit the marked voting system ballot in the ballot box in
 accordance with the instructions provided at the polling place.
 (b)  The ballot box or attached voting system ballot scanner
 must not contain a ballot marking device or printer capable of
 marking the ballot after deposit by the voter.
 (c)  A ballot scanner must be capable of detecting and
 preventing the acceptance of a ballot containing an identical
 serial number more than once.
 SECTION 22.  Subchapter C, Chapter 125, Election Code, is
 amended by adding Section 125.0621 to read as follows:
 Sec. 125.0621.  LOGS OF ISSUED AND SPOILED BALLOTS. If an
 electronic voting system uses paper media for recording votes cast,
 the election officer shall maintain a record of the serial numbers
 of all ballots issued at that polling place and the serial numbers
 of any spoiled ballots, if any. All logs maintained under this
 section are election records subject to public inspection as
 provided by Section 1.012.
 SECTION 23.  Section 125.063, Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 125.063.  SECURING EQUIPMENT ON CLOSE OF VOTING. (a)
 On the close of voting at each polling place at which electronic
 voting system equipment is used, an election officer shall secure
 or inactivate the equipment as prescribed by the secretary of state
 so that its unauthorized operation is prevented.
 (b)  An election officer shall reconcile the number of names
 of voters casting votes at that polling place with the number of
 votes cast as shown on the electronic voting system equipment and
 note any discrepancy and the reason for the discrepancy.
 (c)  An election officer must generate a paper record of the
 number of votes cast for each candidate or measure when using
 electronic voting system equipment that does not generate a
 voter-verified paper ballot record, except during early voting.
 The secretary of state may not waive this requirement after
 September 1, 2022.
 SECTION 24.  Sections 127.006(a) and (c), Election Code, are
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  The [Both the] manager may appoint clerks in the same
 manner as a deputy early voting clerk under Section 83.032. The
 [and the] presiding judge and the alternate presiding judge may
 appoint clerks to serve at the central counting station in the same
 manner as clerks under Section 32.002.
 (c)  A clerk appointed by the manager serves under the
 manager and shall perform the functions directed by the manager. A
 clerk appointed by the presiding judge or alternate presiding judge
 serves under the presiding judge or alternate presiding judge,
 respectively, and shall perform the functions directed by the
 presiding judge or alternate presiding judge, respectively. Clerks
 shall only accept direction from their appointing authority.
 SECTION 25.  Section 127.1232, Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 127.1232.  SECURITY OF VOTED BALLOTS. (a) The general
 custodian of election records shall post a licensed peace officer
 [guard] to ensure the security of ballot boxes containing voted
 ballots throughout the period of tabulation at the central counting
 station.
 (b)  The general custodian of election records shall
 implement a video surveillance system that retains a record of all
 areas containing voted ballots from the time the voted ballots are
 delivered to the central counting station until the canvass of
 precinct election returns.
 (c)  The video recorded is an election record under Section
 1.012 and shall be retained by the general custodian of election
 records until the end of the calendar year in which an election is
 held.
 SECTION 26.  Section 127.131, Election Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (f) to read as follows:
 (f)  The presiding judge shall compare the number of names of
 voters who voted with the number of votes counted and note any
 discrepancy on the returns with the reason for the discrepancy.
 SECTION 27.  Subchapter E, Chapter 273, Election Code, is
 amended by adding Section 273.082 to read as follows:
 Sec. 273.082.  DISQUALIFICATION OF DISTRICT JUDGE. (a) A
 judge is disqualified to preside in the matter of an election
 official who is a defendant in a petition for injunctive relief that
 is less than statewide if the judge presides over a judicial
 district that includes any territory served by the election
 official.
 (b)  If a petition is filed in which a judge is disqualified
 under Subsection (a), the district clerk shall promptly call the
 filing to the attention of the judge. The judge shall promptly
 request the presiding judge of the administrative judicial region
 to assign a special judge to preside in the matter.
 (c)  A judge who resides in the judicial district served by a
 judge disqualified under Subsection (a) is not eligible for
 assignment as a special judge for the contest.
 (d)  In a matter in which the district judge is disqualified,
 until a special judge is assigned to preside over the contest, the
 presiding judge of the administrative judicial region may take any
 action regarding the contest that a district judge may take,
 including the issuance of temporary relief.
 SECTION 28.  Chapter 273, Election Code, is amended by
 adding Subchapter F to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER F. STATE ELECTIONS TRIBUNAL
 Sec. 273.101.  ESTABLISHMENT OF STATE ELECTIONS TRIBUNAL.
 (a) The secretary of state shall establish a state elections
 tribunal to hear and decide election administration disputes.
 (b)  The state elections tribunal is composed of three
 examiners appointed by the secretary of state to terms of six years,
 consisting of:
 (1)  a former justice of the Texas Supreme Court; and
 (2)  two experts in election law who are members of
 different political parties selected from a list of at least 10
 names submitted by the state chair of each political party required
 by law to hold a primary.
 (c)  The former justice of the Texas Supreme Court shall be
 the presiding officer of the state elections tribunal.
 (d)  Members of the state elections tribunal shall be
 compensated, from money appropriated to the secretary of state, for
 services actually performed at the same rate as a retired justice or
 judge sitting by assignment on the court of appeals containing
 Travis County as provided in Chapter 74, Government Code. In
 addition to this compensation, members of the state elections
 tribunal shall be reimbursed for actual travel expenses going to
 and returning from the place of service.
 (e)  The secretary of state shall provide appropriate
 administrative support to the state elections tribunal for use in
 the conduct of its duties.
 Sec. 273.102.  ACTION BY STATE ELECTIONS TRIBUNAL. (a) The
 state elections tribunal has concurrent jurisdiction with the
 district courts to enjoin violations or threatened violations of
 this code.
 (b)  The state elections tribunal may by written order
 suspend any election official who wilfully violates a provision of
 this code.
 Sec. 273.103.  NOTICE OF TRIBUNAL ACTION. The parties to a
 matter before the state elections tribunal shall be notified of the
 tribunal's decision and the reasons for the decision.
 Sec. 273.104.  RULES REGARDING HEARINGS CONDUCTED BY
 TELEPHONE OR ELECTRONIC CONFERENCE. The secretary of state by rule
 shall develop procedures to ensure that the state elections
 tribunal makes every effort in a hearing conducted by telephone or
 electronic conference under this subchapter to obtain all relevant
 facts and evidence from the parties to the matter.
 Sec. 273.105.  JUDICIAL REVIEW. (a) A party aggrieved by an
 action of the state elections tribunal may obtain judicial review
 of the decision by bringing a petition for mandamus relief in the
 supreme court.
 (b)  Each other party to the proceeding before the state
 elections tribunal must be made a party in interest in a mandamus
 action under this section.
 Sec. 273.106.  REPRESENTATION OF STATE ELECTIONS TRIBUNAL.
 The state elections tribunal may be represented in any judicial
 action involving an action of the state elections tribunal by the
 attorney general.
 SECTION 29.  Chapter 276, Election Code, is amended by
 adding Sections 276.014 and 276.015 to read as follows:
 Sec. 276.014.  PAID VOTE HARVESTING. (a) In this section
 and Section 276.015, "vote harvesting services" means direct
 interaction with one or more voters in connection with an official
 ballot, a ballot voted by mail, or an application for ballot by
 mail, intended to deliver votes for a specific candidate or
 measure.
 (b)  A person commits an offense if the person, directly or
 through a third party, knowingly provides or offers to provide the
 vote harvesting services in exchange for compensation or other
 benefit, including benefits to a party whose welfare is of interest
 to the person.
 (c)  A person commits an offense if the person, directly or
 through a third party, knowingly provides or offers to provide
 compensation or other benefit to a person, or to another party whose
 welfare is of interest to the person, in exchange for the vote
 harvesting services.
 (d)  A person commits an offense if the person knowingly
 collects or possesses a ballot voted by mail or official carrier
 envelope from a voter in connection with the vote harvesting
 services.
 (e)  This section does not apply to acts promoting a
 candidate or measure that do not involve direct interaction with:
 (1)  an application for ballot by mail, in the presence
 of the voter; or
 (2)  a voter's official ballot, ballot voted by mail, or
 carrier envelope.
 (f)  In this section, compensation in exchange for the vote
 harvesting services is inferred if a person who performed the vote
 harvesting services for a candidate or campaign solicits, receives,
 or is offered compensation from the candidate or campaign, directly
 or through a third party, for services other than the vote
 harvesting services provided.
 (g)  An offense under this section is a felony of the third
 degree.
 (h)  If conduct that constitutes an offense under this
 section also constitutes an offense under any other law, the actor
 may be prosecuted under this section, the other law, or both.
 Sec. 276.015.  CIVIL LIABILITY FOR UNLAWFUL VOTE HARVESTING.
 (a) A person who commits an offense under Section 276.014 is liable
 to any candidate harmed by the vote harvesting services for damages
 and penalties that may be awarded under Subsection (c).
 (b)  A person is harmed by the vote harvesting services if
 the person can demonstrate that:
 (1)  the person was a candidate for office;
 (2)  the liable party committed an offense under
 Section 276.014; and
 (3)  another candidate seeking the same office as the
 person received a vote attributable to the offense, regardless of
 whether the other candidate knowingly participated in the vote
 harvesting services.
 (c)  A litigant who prevails in an action under Subsection
 (b) shall recover from any person who committed the unlawful vote
 harvesting services damages in an amount including:
 (1)  the amount of any compensation paid to or received
 by the person in exchange for the vote harvesting services;
 (2)  the fair market value of any benefit given or
 received in exchange for the vote harvesting services;
 (3)  a penalty in the amount of $25,000; and
 (4)  reasonable attorney's fees, court costs, witness
 fees, and deposition fees.
 (d)  A litigant who prevails in an action under Subsection
 (b) and shows that the number of voters contacted by the vote
 harvesting services exceeds the number of votes by which the
 litigant lost the election shall recover from the person liable for
 the unlawful vote harvesting services punitive damages in an amount
 including:
 (1)  any of the litigant's campaign expenditures
 properly filed on a campaign finance report in connection with the
 election; and
 (2)  any fees and expenses incurred by the litigant in
 filing and securing a place on the ballot.
 (e)  A person who commits an offense under Section 276.014
 and is found liable under this chapter or other law for any amount
 of damages arising from the vote harvesting services is jointly
 liable with any other defendant for the entire amount of damages
 arising from the vote harvesting services.
 (f)  The cause of action created by this section is
 cumulative to any other remedy provided by common law or statute.
 (g)  The expedited actions process created by Rule 169, Texas
 Rules of Civil Procedure, does not apply to an action under this
 section.
 (h)  Chapter 27, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, does not
 apply to a cause of action under this section.
 (i)  A cause of action under this section may be brought in
 the county where any part of the vote harvesting services occurred.
 SECTION 30.  Section 81.032, Local Government Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 81.032.  ACCEPTANCE OF DONATIONS AND BEQUESTS. (a) The
 commissioners court may accept a donation of labor or services,
 gift, grant, donation, bequest, or devise of money or other
 property on behalf of the county, including a donation under
 Chapter 38, Government Code, for the purpose of performing a
 function conferred by law on the county or a county officer.
 (b)  The commissioners court may not accept a donation
 described in Subsection (a) of over $1,000 for use in administering
 elections without the written consent of the secretary of state.
 SECTION 31.  The following provisions of the Election Code
 are repealed:
 (1)  Section 32.032; and
 (2)  Section 85.062(e).
 SECTION 32.  The changes in law made by this Act apply only
 to a petition for injunctive relief filed on or after the effective
 date of this Act. A petition for injunctive relief filed before the
 effective date of this Act is governed by the law in effect on the
 date the petition was filed, and the former law is continued in
 effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 33.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2021.