Texas 2025 89th Regular

Texas House Bill HB1013 Introduced / Bill

Filed 11/14/2024

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                    By: Toth H.B. No. 1013




 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to election integrity and security, including by
 preventing fraud in the conduct of elections in this state;
 authorizing a penalty, increasing a penalty.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 ARTICLE 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS
 SECTION 1.01.  SHORT TITLE. This Act may be cited as the
 Election Accuracy, Transparency, and Accountability Act.
 SECTION 1.02.  Chapter 41 of the Texas Election Code is
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 41.002.  GENERAL ELECTION FOR STATE AND COUNTY
 OFFICERS. The general election for state and county officers shall
 be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in
 even-numbered years.  Voting by personal appearance shall begin 8
 calendar days in advance of election day culminating on election
 day for a total of 9 consecutive days for voting by personal
 appearance.
 SECTION 1.03.  Title 7 of the Election Code shall be amended
 to repeal provisions permitting and governing early voting by
 personal appearance.
 SECTION 1.04.  Chapter 42 of the Texas Election Code shall be
 amended as follows:
 Sec. 42.006.  POPULATION REQUIREMENTS. (a)  Except as
 otherwise provided by this section, a county election precinct must
 contain at least 100 but not more than 2,000 [5,000] registered
 voters.
 SECTION 1.05.  Chapter 43 of the Texas Election Code shall be
 amended as follows:
 Sec. 43.001.  ONE POLLING PLACE IN EACH PRECINCT.  Each
 election precinct established for an election shall be served by a
 single polling place located within the boundary of the precinct or
 adjoining precinct.  More than one precinct may vote at the same
 location provided the location is large enough to accommodate all
 election activities as required by this code while keeping those
 activities separate and distinct for each precinct.
 Sec. 43.031.  POLLING PLACE IN PUBLIC BUILDING. (a)  In this
 subchapter, "public building" means a building owned or controlled
 by the state or a political subdivision.
 (b)  Each polling place shall be located inside a building.
 The room where the election is conducted shall be used solely for
 that purpose during the election and shall be capable of being
 locked and secured from unauthorized access at any time an election
 judge is not present.
 (b-1)  No voter may cast a vote from inside a motor vehicle
 unless the voter meets the requirements of Section 64.009.  A
 violation of this section is a state-jail felony offense.
 Sec. 43.031  (e) A polling place may not be located at the
 residence or business location of a person who is:
 (1)  a candidate for an elective office, including an
 office of a political party; or
 (2)  related within the third degree by consanguinity
 or the second degree by affinity, as determined under Chapter 573,
 Government Code, to a candidate described by Subdivision (1).
 (f)  The polling place may not be located in a movable
 structure.
 SECTION 1.06.  Chapter 51 of the Texas Election Code shall be
 amended as follows:
 Sec. 51.004.  DISTRIBUTING SUPPLIES.
 (b)  The appropriate and sufficient amounts of supplies
 including but not limited to ballots shall be distributed to each
 presiding election judge not later than one hour before the polls
 are required to be open for voting [and to the early voting clerk
 before the beginning of early voting].
 (c)  In addition to any other penalty set forth in this code,
 failure to comply with this section or Section 51.005 by an election
 administrator or election officer whether or not intentional
 impacting more than one precinct shall result in the removal of the
 election administrator or election officer and the election shall
 be reconducted.
 Sec. 51.005.  NUMBER OF BALLOTS. (a) The authority
 responsible for procuring the election supplies for an election
 shall provide for each election precinct a number of ballots equal
 to at least the [percentage] number of registered voters [who
 voted] in that precinct [in the most recent corresponding election]
 plus 1 [25] percent of that number [except that the number of
 ballots provided may not exceed the total number of registered
 voters in the precinct].
 Sec. 51.011.  OBSTRUCTING DISTRIBUTION OF SUPPLIES. (a) A
 person commits an offense if the person intentionally obstructs the
 distribution of election supplies for an election.
 (b)  An offense under this section is a state jail felony
 [Class C misdemeanor].
 Sec. 51.013.  IDENTIFICATION OF PRINTERS FOR PRIMARY
 ELECTION OR GENERAL ELECTION FOR STATE AND COUNTY OFFICERS. Amend
 to add (e), (f)and (g):
 (e)  Ballot printing services shall be procured from
 printers located within the state of Texas.
 (f)  Chain of custody procedures including securing batches
 with uniquely numbered seals that are logged, shall be followed
 including documentation of such procedures by the printer from the
 time the ballots come off the press until they are delivered
 securely to the county elections officer.  Failure of printer to
 follow chain of custody procedures and/or produce required
 documentation at the time of delivery of ballots shall result in
 termination of all present and future contracts.
 (g)  Chain of custody procedures including securing batches
 with uniquely numbered seals that are logged, shall be followed
 including documentation of such procedures by the printer from the
 time the ballots come off the press until they are delivered
 securely to the county elections officer.  Failure of printer to
 follow chain of custody procedures and/or produce required
 documentation at the time of delivery of ballots shall result in
 termination of all present and future contracts.
 SECTION 1.07.  Chapter 52 of the Texas Election Code shall be
 Amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 52.0064.  ACTIONS TO BE TAKEN BY RESPONSIBLE CLERK IN
 EVENT OF MISPRINT or BALLOT PRINTING ERROR.
 (a)  In the event of a misprint or other error in printing one
 or more ballots, such ballots must be marked "VOID" in large letters
 across the front of the ballots.    (b) Such void ballots must be
 accounted for by ballot number, placed in locked containers with
 numbered seals marked "VOID MISPRINTED BALLOTS" and placed in a
 secure, locked location and retained as election records.  Such
 void ballots numbers shall be recorded as void numbers and no voided
 ballot numbers may be used for any re-printed ballots.  Strict chain
 of custody procedures shall be followed.
 [Sec.A52.0064.DESTRUCTION OF INCORRECT BALLOTS.  (a)  If new
 ballots are prepared to make a correction on the ballot, the
 authority responsible for having the official ballot prepared shall
 destroy the incorrect ballots in the presence of: (1)the sheriff,
 in an election ordered by the governor or a primary election; or
 (2)the authority responsible for ordering the election, in any
 other election. (b)The authority responsible for having the
 official ballot prepared shall post in the authority 's office a
 notice of the date, hour, and place of the destruction of the
 incorrect ballots. The notice must remain posted continuously for
 the 72 hours preceding the scheduled time of the destruction.
 (c)Any interested person is entitled to be present at the
 destruction of incorrect ballots. (d) The authority responsible for
 having the official ballot prepared shall prepare a record of the
 incorrect ballots that are destroyed.  The authority shall preserve
 the record for the period for preserving the precinct election
 records.]
 Sec. 52.061.  PRINTING ON BALLOT. (a) The ballot shall be
 designed for hand marking and shall be printed in black ink, on
 secure, auditable, counterfeit resistant, non-encrypted paper, on
 white or light-colored paper, but the ballot may not be the same
 color as sample ballots.  No ballot may contain any QR or bar code or
 any other code not readable by the human eye nor may a ballot
 contain any open or encrypted of tracking, tracing or identifying a
 voter's ballot.
 (c)  The voting precinct number and polling location shall be
 pre-printed on all pages of the ballot.
 (d)  Failure of the Election Administrator comply with this
 section shall be a Class A misdemeanor.
 Sec. 52.062.  NUMBERING OF BALLOTS. The ballots prepared by
 each authority responsible for having the official ballot prepared
 shall be numbered sequentially and in accordance with this code,
 with no gap in numbering, on the front and back of each ballot,
 consecutively beginning with the number "1."  No ballot in the state
 shall have a duplicative number.
 SECTION 1.08.  Chapter 61 of the Texas Election Code shall be
 amended as follows:
 Sec. 61.002.  CLOSING POLLING PLACE FOR VOTING.
 (c)  Immediately after closing the polls for voting on
 [election day] the final day of voting, the presiding election
 judge or alternate election judge shall follow the hand counting
 procedures set forth in Chapter 61.0021 of the code. [print the tape
 to show the number of votes cast for each candidate or ballot
 measure for each voting machine.
 Each election judge or alternate election judge present shall sign
 a tape printed under this section]]
 Sec. 61.0021  OF COUNTING ELECTION.
 (a)  All elections shall be conducted with full transparency
 and video recorded without interruption.  These video recordings
 shall be made freely available to all interested parties and
 publicly posted so that they can be access by every citizen without
 cost or additional request.  The video recordings must clearly
 capture the ballot selections on each ballot counted and the
 tabulation result associated with that ballot.
 (a-1)  If technically feasible, the hand counting procedure
 may be live streamed.
 (b)  The election materials including ballots, ballot boxes,
 and envelopes used for provisional ballots at a polling place shall
 be in plain view of at least one election officer from the time the
 polls open for voting until the precinct returns have been
 certified.  The election materials must also have constant video
 recording from the time the polls open for voting until the precinct
 returns have been certified while ensuring no individual voter is
 identifiably recorded.
 (c)  All counting shall be done by hand at the precinct prior
 to transporting the ballots to any other location.
 (d)  Counting shall be performed by bi-partisan teams. Each
 team shall be assigned a reasonable number of ballots in batches and
 the video recording will memorialize and confirm the count. Prior
 to beginning the count, the video recording will begin by recording
 a caption page.  This page will define the time, date, team members,
 supervisor members and a sample ballot.  The video will conclude
 showing the same caption page except that the caption page shall be
 signed by the team members and the raw totals shall be listed by
 race. This video recording shall be securely made so that it cannot
 be altered in any way.  A sufficient number of counting teams shall
 be assembled so as to complete the count within approximately three
 hours of the closing of the polls.  These teams shall be supervised
 by an appropriate number of supervisory teams composed of equal
 numbers of the major political parties.  At the conclusion of each
 count, members of the counting team, supervisors and any poll
 watchers present shall sign that the count has been completed and
 report the totals they determined from that count.
 (e)  The public shall be provided with access to the video
 recordings at the earliest time possible.  Before the election may
 be certified, the public shall be provided 30 days to examine the
 video recordings for errors.  Should a voter registered in the
 county determine that the count was in error, such registered voter
 shall notify the supervisor of elections of the error, identifying
 the video that is in error along with the time location in the video
 where the count was made incorrectly.  The registered voter
 reporting the error is not required to not make the report public.
 The canvassing authority shall review the video recording in
 question to make a determination whether the count was in error.
 Poll watchers shall be permitted to be present during the review of
 the video recording in question.  If the error is confirmed, the
 official results shall be corrected.  Should the canvassing
 authority fail to diligently correct the error prior to certifying
 the election, or if there is a dispute as to whether an error
 exists, two or more voters registered in the county are permitted to
 file a suit and, if they are found to be correct, the plaintiffs
 shall recoup their attorney's fees and costs of court associated
 with the suit.  In addition, members of the canvassing authority who
 failed to correct the error shall be subject to recall and removal
 from their elected office upon petition of 10 registered voters of
 the jurisdiction, which recall shall be decided in a special
 election to occur within 45 days after the filing of the petition.
 During the interim, the members of the canvassing authority who are
 the subject of the recall shall be suspended from their duties until
 the recall results are determined.
 (f)  The court or jury shall make any required final
 determination of an error in the count utilizing the video
 recording of that team's count and may take testimony as required to
 assist in their fact finding.
 (g)  At the conclusion of the counting process, the caption
 pages of each team shall be compiled to determine the election
 results.  The tallies from the caption pages shall be recorded on a
 final tally sheet and added by two members of a bi-partisan team.
 Poll watchers may also verify the totals. Bi-partisan team members
 shall sign the final tally sheet, certifying its accuracy.
 (h)  Mail in ballots shall be transported unopened to the
 precinct in which the person would have voted in person. They shall
 be opened at the precinct and counted with the ballots that were
 voted in person.
 (i)  At no time will the supervisor of elections, any
 election staff, nor any other party restore, clean-up, define,
 enhance, or alter a voter's submitted ballot in any way. A
 violation under this section is a Class A misdemeanor.
 (j)  The results of the hand count shall be posted on the door
 of the precinct for a minimum period of three days.  All precinct
 results shall be posted by precinct, on the county website and the
 secretary of state's website.  The presiding judge shall ensure the
 results are correctly posted both on the county's website and on the
 secretary of state's website.
 Sec. 61.005.  SECURITY OF BALLOTS, BALLOT BOXES, AND
 ENVELOPES. (a) From the time a presiding judge receives the
 [official] ballots and other election materials [for an election]
 until the closing of the polls on the final day of voting and
 delivery of such voting materials to the official delivery
 location,[precinct returns for that election have been certified,]
 the presiding judge shall take the precautions necessary to prevent
 access to such election materials, the ballots, ballot boxes, and
 envelopes used for provisional ballots, ensure that the room where
 the election is being conducted is locked and completely secured
 from unauthorized access at any time the judge or an alternate judge
 is not present, that the ballots both voted and unvoted are secured
 in a box or cabinet that is secured with a uniquely numbered seal.
 The numbers of such seals shall be logged on the reconciliation
 reports by the judge or alternate judge. [in a manner not
 authorized by law.]
 (b)  The ballots, ballot boxes, and envelopes used for
 provisional ballots at a polling place shall be in plain view of at
 least one election officer or secured as set forth in (a) above from
 the time the polls open for voting until the precinct returns have
 been certified.
 (2)  A presiding election judge commits an offense if
 the judge fails to prevent another person from handling a ballot box
 containing voters' marked ballots or an envelope containing a
 voter's provisional ballot in an unauthorized manner or from making
 an unauthorized entry into the ballot box or envelope.  An offense
 under this subsection is a Class A misdemeanor.  If the offense is
 committed knowingly, it shall be a third-degree felony.
 (c)(1)  At any time the judge suspects a security incident or
 breach of the equipment, the ballot box, the unvoted ballots or of
 any other election materials, or in the event a numbered seal does
 not match the number of the seal recorded by the judge the night
 before, the judge shall immediately segregate and secure the
 affected box or materials, and shall contact both the county
 sheriff and the county election officer and report the facts.  If
 necessary, the county election officer shall deliver additional
 election materials, as needed to the precinct, within 1 hour of the
 initial report in order that voting may continue.  The judge shall
 guard against unnecessary handling of breached election materials
 and shall preserve any evidence that may assist in any
 investigation. The county election officer and the sheriff shall
 conduct a full investigation to determine what occurred and the
 cause.  The county election officer shall ensure that only legally
 cast ballots are counted.  If the breach was on a voting day prior to
 election day, the county shall post an overnight guard at the
 polling location for the remainder of the voting period to ensure no
 further breach occurs.
 (c)(2)  At the appropriate time and as needed, the judge
 shall provide an affidavit of facts. The county election officer
 shall make a full report to the county party chairs and the
 secretary of state within 24 hours of receiving the report.
 Sec. 61.007.  UNLAWFULLY REVEALING INFORMATION BEFORE POLLS
 CLOSE. (c) Beginning at 9:30 a.m. on each day of voting and at each
 subsequent two-hour interval through [5:30 p.m.] the closing of the
 polls, the presiding judge shall post written notice of the total
 cumulative number of voters who have voted in the precinct and the
 number of voters who have voted that day.  The notice shall be
 posted at an outside door through which a voter may enter the
 building in which the polling place is located.
 Sec. 61.014.  USE OF CERTAIN DEVICES. (a) A person may not
 use a wireless communication device within 100 feet of a voting
 station.
 (b)  A person may not use any mechanical or electronic means
 of recording images or sound within 100 feet of the entrance to a
 voting station.
 (c)  The presiding judge may require a person who violates
 this section to turn off the device or to leave the polling place.
 (d)  This section does not apply to:
 (1)  an election officer in conducting the officer's
 official duties;
 (2)  the use of election equipment necessary for the
 conduct of the election; or
 (3)  a person who is employed or serving as a watcher at
 the location in which a polling place is located while the person is
 acting in the course of the person's employment or service.
 (e)  Violation of this section shall be an offense that is a
 Class C misdemeanor.
 SECTION 1.09.  Chapter 63, Election Code, is amended as
 follows:
 Sec. 63.003.  POLL LIST. (a) A printed, physical poll list
 containing the list of names of the voters duly registered in the
 precinct as of the date that is 30 days in advance of election day
 including their residence address, whether they applied for a
 mail-in ballot, and space to indicate the information required in
 65.003(e) shall be [maintained] kept by an election officer at the
 precinct polling place.  (a)(1) Each voter shall be required to
 place their regular signature upon the poll list in the signature
 space next to their name.
 (c)  An election officer shall enter each accepted voter's
 name by hand on [the] a separate voter roster list after the voter
 signs the poll book list [signature roster].  The voter roster form
 shall provide space for the judge to indicate whether the voter's
 name is a similar name to the registered name rather than the exact
 name. The voter roster shall be kept in quadruplicate with the
 original going in the box with the voted ballots, a copy retained by
 the election judge, a copy retained by the alternate election
 judge, and a copy submitted to the county clerk in the appropriate
 closing envelope.  The county clerk shall provide the list to the
 ballot board upon request.
 (d)  If the poll list indicates a voter requested a mail-in
 ballot, the election judge shall ensure that the process for
 cancelling the mail in ballot is followed before allowing a voter to
 vote.  [The poll list may be in the form of an electronic device
 approved by the secretary of state. The secretary of state shall
 adopt rules governing the use of electronic poll lists.]
 (e)  The poll book shall include space for an election
 officer to indicate whether a voter executed a Declaration of
 Reasonable Impediment under Section 63.001(i).
 Sec. 63.011.  PROVISIONAL VOTING. (a) A person to whom
 Section 63.001(g) or 63.009 applies may cast a provisional ballot
 if the person executes an affidavit stating that the person:
 (1)  is a registered voter in the precinct in which the
 person seeks to vote; and
 (2)  is eligible to vote in the election.
 (a-1)  A person to whom the [early voting] clerk was required
 to provide a[n] [early] voting ballot by mail under Section 86.001
 and who did not vote [early] by mail may cast a provisional ballot
 on election day if the person executes an affidavit stating that the
 person:
 (1)  is a registered voter in the precinct in which the
 person seeks to vote; and
 (2)  did not vote [early] by mail.
 SECTION 1.10.  Chapter 276.019, Election Code is amended as
 follows:
 Sec. 276.019.  UNLAWFUL ALTERING OF ELECTION PROCEDURES. A
 public official or election official may not create, alter, modify,
 waive, or suspend any election standard, practice, or procedure
 mandated by law or rule in a manner not expressly authorized by this
 code.  (a)  A violation of this section is subject to injunctive
 relief or mandamus as provided by this code; and
 (3)  (b)  a knowing or intentional first offense
 under this section is a class A misdemeanor;
 (4)  (c)  each offense thereafter is a state jail
 felony.
 SECTION 1.11.  Title 7 of the Election Code shall be amended
 to repeal provisions permitting and governing early voting by
 personal appearance.
 SECTION 1.12.  The following provisions of the Election Code
 are repealed:
 (1)  Section 31.014;
 (2)  Section 32.002(c-1);
 (3)  Section 32.032;
 (4)  Section 43.004(c);
 (5)  Section 43.007;
 (6)  Section 52.075;
 (7)  Section 61.002 (a) and (b);
 (8)  Section 63.0102;
 (9)  Section 63.002(d);
 (10)  Section 63.004;
 (11)  Section 63.0102(d);
 (12)  Section 64.009(f), (f-1), (g), and (h);
 (13)  Section 82.003;
 (14)  Section 84.0111(c);
 (15)  Chapter 85;
 (16)  Title 8
 SECTION 1.13.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2025.