Three months after first questioning the citizenship status of almost 100,000 registered voters, the Texas Secretary of State has agreed to end a review of the voter rolls for supposed noncitizens that was flawed from the start.
The deal was announced Friday as part of an agreement to settle three legal challenges brought by more than a dozen naturalized citizens and voting rights groups against the State. The groups alleged that the voter citizenship review, which was launched in late January, was unconstitutional and violated federal protections for voters of color.
Secretary of State David Whitley — who has yet to be confirmed by the Texas Senate amid the fallout over the review — agreed to scrap the lists of registered voters his office had sent to county voter registrars for examination. Whitley’s office will instruct local officials to take no further action on the names of people it had classified as “possible non-U.S citizens,” and county officials will be charged with notifying voters who received letters demanding they prove their citizenship that their registrations are safe.
The State is also on the hook for $450,000 in costs and attorney fees for the plaintiffs’ lawyers.
The agreement must still be approved by the federal judge overseeing the case, and the State will have five days after the judge dismisses the plaintiffs’ legal claims to officially rescind the list. But the settlement amounts to a profound defeat for the state leaders who had defended the review even though it had jeopardized the voting rights of tens of thousands of naturalized citizens.
“Today’s agreement accomplishes our office’s goal of maintaining an accurate list of qualified registered voters while eliminating the impact of any list maintenance activity on naturalized U.S. citizens,” Whitley said in a statement Friday. “I will continue to work with all stakeholders in the election community to ensure this process is conducted in a manner that holds my office accountable and protects the voting rights of eligible Texans.”
The original review had been mired in controversy since day one, largely because of the faulty methodology the State used to compile the list and the fanfare with which it was announced.
Top Republican leaders, including Gov. Greg Abbott and President Donald Trump, took to Twitter to falsely tout the list as proof of illegal registrations and voting in Texas. In reality, the Secretary of State’s office matched the voter rolls with data it requested from the Texas Department of Public Safety for individuals who at some point in the last few years told the department they were not citizens when they obtained a driver’s license or ID card. But the review did not account for people who could’ve become naturalized citizens since then and weren’t required to update DPS.
The settlement does not prohibit the Secretary of State from screening the State’s massive voter registration database for possible noncitizens, but state officials agreed they would rework their methodology to only flag voters who provided DPS with documentation showing they were not citizens after they were registered to vote.
It’s unclear how that will shrink the original list of voters whose citizenship was questioned. Officials agreed to provide the plaintiffs with that number as well as three more updates once the State begins compiling weekly lists to send out to county officials.
Those changes are expected to address the issues at the heart of the State’s first botched attempt at reviewing the voter rolls, which unraveled within days of announcing the effort when state workers began quietly informing local election officials that thousands of the names on the original list shouldn’t have been there. A top election official in the Secretary of State’s office would later acknowledge that his office had overstated the number of flagged voters by about 25,000 names because of the mistake. And local officials would quickly note they had been able to verify that hundreds of other individuals on the list were naturalized citizens.
“After months of litigation, the State has finally agreed to do what we’ve demanded from the start — a complete withdrawal of the flawed and discriminatory voter purge list, bringing this failed experiment in voter suppression to an end,” said Andre Segura, legal director for the ACLU of Texas, which represented plaintiffs in the case. “The right to vote is sacrosanct, and no eligible voter should have to worry about losing that right.”
In court in February, lawyers for the plaintiffs in the three lawsuits zeroed in on state officials’ own admissions that they knew naturalized citizens would be affected by the review. Despite those admissions and errors in the data, state officials continued to stand by the review as routine list maintenance and a good faith effort to maintain the integrity of the voter rolls. They also went as far as blaming individual county officials for acting too quickly to question voters on their lists, even though those local officials followed the State’s instructions for reviewing the eligibility of those voters.
Under the settlement, the State agreed to provide local officials with new training materials.The plaintiffs and the State reached the settlement agreement two months after District Judge Fred Biery signaled his displeasure with the way Texas handled the review. In temporarily putting the effort on hold after three days of testimony in San Antonio, Biery chided state officials for putting “perfectly legal naturalized Americans” on a path to receiving “ham-handed and threatening” letters that demanded they prove their citizenship to avoid getting kicked off the rolls.
In a scathing four-page order, Biery wrote that the letters exemplified “the power of government to strike fear and anxiety to intimidate the least powerful among us.”
“No native born Americans were subjected to such treatment,” Biery said.
State attorneys indicated to Biery in late March that they had proposed a deal to end the litigation. Despite early reports of an agreement, it took several weeks to iron out a deal in which the plaintiffs agreed to rescind their legal claims against the State and their requests for documents. (The plaintiffs indicated in the settlement agreement that they are not conceding that the State’s review efforts comply with federal law, leaving them room to take the State back to court if they’re troubled by subsequent reviews.)
The debacle prompted a congressional inquiry as part of a larger investigation into voter suppression in various states. Congressional investigators have requested documents and communications related to the review. But the State has so far mostly denied those requests, only handing over documents that were already public.
It remains unclear what the settlement means for the registered voters whose names were referred to Attorney General Ken Paxton, who has the authority to prosecute claims of voter fraud. In announcing the original review, Whitley noted his office had immediately handed over the list of names to the attorney general. Since then, Paxton’s office has offered mixed messages on whether it has begun to criminally investigate voters.
On Friday, the groups and lawyers who sued the State celebrated the settlement but lamented the confusion and frustration the review effort caused.
“State officials have wasted hundreds of thousands of dollars and struck fear and confusion into thousands of voters in order to pursue their voter suppression agenda,” said Beth Stevens, voting rights legal director with the Texas Civil Rights Project, which was also involved in the lawsuit. “We are glad that this particular effort was stopped in its tracks and we will remain vigilant to ensure that not one single voter loses their right to vote due to the actions of state officials.”


Simply have everyone reregister with a picture ID every 3-5 years.
Gee it’s tough being an irrational, fear mongering, separatist Republican nowadays.
I so appreciate the judge’s comment about officials using their power to intimidate and frighten the most vulnerable. This happens so frequently with our policy makers and it is about time they were called on it and hopefully felt some shame. Sometimes I see policy makers being shameless but there i always have hope. I only this type of call out continues to happen.
Texas 95,000 non-citizens registered to vote-fake news and creating fake fear?
On January 27, 2019 President Trump tweeted that “58, 000 non-citizens voted, with 95,000 non-citizens registered to vote”. This is Trump fake news and is inciting fake fear.
A few years ago, Texas Department of Public Service provided Texas Governor Abbot Texas a list of 95,000 non-citizens, legal permanent residents, who applied for driver’s license. By law, non-citizens, who are legal permanent residents, can apply for a Texas driver’s license. Then, after five years, the legal permanent residents can apply or United States citizenship (Naturalization). They can apply for citizenship after three years, if married to United States citizens for three years. Governor Abbot and the Secretary of State provided all, or part of the list of 95,000, to Texas Counties for investigation of voter fraud.
Texas County officials reported back to the Secretary of State that they find no voter fraud among the 95,000 flagged individuals. The individuals on the list of 95,000, who voted, had naturalized and had become United States citizens, before they voted.
Instead of creating fear with fake news of voter fraud, President Trump and Governor Abbot should praise US Citizenship and Immigration Services for an excellent job in investigating voter fraud by legal permanent residents. After legal permanent residents apply for US citizenship, a comprehensive background check reveals those legal permanent residents who registered to vote, and, those who voted.
Most legal permanent residents, who registered to vote, registered to vote by mistake. Many received erroneous instructed to register to vote when they received instructions to register for military Selective Service at age 18. Many received erroneous instructed to register to vote when they applied for a Texas driver’s license. Other agencies also provided erroneous information to register to vote.
Comprehensive investigations of applicants for Naturalization (citizenship) reveal those who thought they could vote and those who committed voter fraud. Those who committed voter fraud are deported and are barred from becoming legal permanent residents or ever qualifying for US Citizenship.
Instead of creating fear with fake news of voter fraud, President Trump and Governor Abbot should encourage best practices to deter voter fraud by immigrants and illegal entry by immigrants.
The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 reducing border illegal immigration?
Prior to the recent asylum caravans from Central America, which started in 2017, studies show that the number of illegal immigrant entries into the U.S. fell to its lowest level in more than a decade. The decline was due almost entirely to a sharp decrease in the number of immigrants from Mexico entering the country without authorization.
Reasons for the decline in illegal immigrants from Mexico, and, from other countries, include improved conditions in other countries, more legal ways to immigrate to the United States, and fear of the consequences of getting caught for illegal entry. The Immigration Reform Act of 1996 may be responsible for new fear of consequences of getting caught.
The US Congress (Democrats and Republicans) enacted the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act in 1996. April 1, 1997 was the effective date. However, due to court litigation, internal agency polices, Presidential policies, and public input, this 1996 Immigration Reform Act is taking years to implement. The 1996 Immigration Reform Act, and other prior immigration Reform Acts, are interwoven into what is called the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). The INA is also implemented in the 8 CFR (Code of Federal Regulations).
For example, the Immigration Reform Act of 1996 made four DWI’s a deportable offense. However, the courts ruled that an offense of four DWI’s was not a federal aggravated felony, and therefore was not a deportable offense. Hundreds, and perhaps thousands, of immigrants were deported for four or more DWI’s before the law was changed.
Courts are still deciding deportation of legal permanent residents (non citizens) who voted. Those who committed voter fraud should be deported. Those who voted by mistake should probably not be deported.
Now comes a new harsh provision of the Immigration Reform Act of 1996 that may be deterring illegal entries at US borders and airports. Under this latest immigration reform act, persons illegally in the US 365 or more days, and who entered the United States after April 1, 1997, must leave the United States and stay out for ten years. After the ten-year bar, immigrants can apply to become a legal permanent resident, stay a legal permanent for five years, and then apply for US Citizenship.
Most immigrants have family members such as spouses, children, and parents in the United States, and, a ten-year separation from these relatives may be a harsh penalty.
The ten-year bar and other penalties of the 1996 Immigration Reform Act are now widely known by potential immigrants from Mexico and probably from potential immigrants from many other countries. The ten-year bar and other immigration penalties in the INA, may be significantly contributing to the decline in illegal immigration along the US/Mexican border.
And just like our ancestors, an overwhelming majority of immigrants immigrate for a better life, and they are not criminals.
Especially with the sophistication of our fingerprinting and other technology, we should not fear that criminal immigrants will infiltrate the United States. Studies show that most criminals in the United States are born in the United States. As President Roosevelt stated, we should fear fear itself. More importantly, those who create fake fear must be held accountable.
David Whitley would be fired in a heartbeat for leading this fiasco anywhere but in our kangaroo government.