A.G. Pax­ton Sues San Antonio's Bexar Coun­ty Over Plan to Send Vot­er Reg­is­tra­tions to Poten­tial­ly Inel­i­gi­ble Voters


“This program is completely unlawful and potentially invites election fraud. It is a crime to register to vote if you are ineligible.”

Texas Insider Report: AUSTIN, Texas Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued the Bexar County Commissioners Court after it voted to enact an unlawful program that would mass-mail voter registration applications to residents regardless of whether those residents have requested such an application or are even eligible to vote. 
 
On September 3, the Bexar County Commissioners Court voted in favor of a new program that would hire a third-party vendor with taxpayer funds to print and distribute voter registration forms to unregistered individuals in the county.

The distribution of forms to unverified recipients could induce ineligible people—such as felons and noncitizens—to commit a crime by attempting to register to vote.

Further, Texas counties have no statutory authority to print and mail state voter registration forms, making the proposal fundamentally illegal.

Attorney General Paxton previously sent a letter to the Bexar County Commissioners Court warning that he would sue if the county attempted to institute the unlawful program.

Now that the commissioners have approved the illegal program, Attorney General Paxton filed a lawsuit asking for an injunction to prevent the program from taking effect. 
 
“Despite being warned against adopting this blatantly illegal program that would spend taxpayer dollars to mail registration applications to potentially ineligible voters, Bexar County has irresponsibly chosen to violate the law,” said Attorney General Paxton.

“This program is completely unlawful and potentially invites election fraud. It is a crime to register to vote if you are ineligible.”
   
  • READ MOREGov. Abbott Announces Over 1 million Ineligible Voters Removed from Voter Rolls
    • Includes non-citizens, deceased voters, and people who moved to another state. The Secretary of State and county voter registrars have an ongoing legal requirement to review the voter rolls, remove ineligible voters, and refer any potential illegal voting to the Attorney General’s Office and local authorities for investigation and prosecution. 












 
Texas Attorney General Paxton by is licensed under
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