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The state’s most populous counties are seeing a significant drop off from four years ago. That’s despite Texas having more registered voters this time around.
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The pandemic led to a historic rise in early voting, as 70% of the electorate cast ballots before Election Day in 2020. In 2022, it looks like more of the same.
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Election Day is Tuesday, Nov. 8.
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The number of sites the Bexar County Commissioners approved on Tuesday was fewer than the 388 ordered by a state district judge.
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Dozens of residents packed Bexar County Commissioners Court on Tuesday to passionately ask them to not cut polling locations for the Nov. 8 elections — a measure proposed to save money.
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Gov. Greg Abbott directed the Texas Education Agency to investigate whether or not Northside Independent School District directed staff to vote for the district’s latest bond after a school choice advocate posted screenshots of an email he said came from a Northside principal.
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How could these changes affect voting where you live?
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In some voting locations where a party’s appointed polling judge didn’t show up, election officials allowed the other party’s judge to operate both parties’ voting machines in an effort to keep the polling place running.
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All over the state, county officials report they’re rejecting hundreds of applications for mail-in ballots, an issue several attribute to recent election law changes championed by state Republicans.