Texas
Related: About this forumInformative article about the Suspense List:
Last edited Thu Sep 5, 2024, 09:40 AM - Edit history (2)
Federal law requires states that abide by the 1993 National Voter Registration Act to maintain voter rolls in each state. However, states are allowed to establish their own systems of voter roll maintenance within the guidelines of federal law. In Texas, the state uses the term 'suspense list' to refer to voters who potentially have address discrepancies.
Voters on the suspense list are still allowed to vote in the 2024 Presidential election, so long as they can attest to their address on the date they are casting a ballot. Registered voters for the November election can also go online before the Oct. 7 voter registration deadline to update their address at votetexas.gov.
In an emailed response to questions from the KHOU 11 Verify Team about when notices are sent out to voters in Fort Bend County, Oldham says, "In December of odd-numbered years all registered voters are to be mailed a replacement voter certificate. That is a non-forwardable piece of mail. If it is returned to the voter registrar as undeliverable then the voter is placed on Suspense and is sent a forwardable Confirmation Notice. If the voter returns the Notice indicating that they still live at the same address, they are returned to Active status. If they return the Notice and update their address to a new one in the county, their record is updated and they are returned to Active status. If they return the Notice indicating that they have moved to an address outside of Fort Bend County, then their registration is canceled. If a family member returns the card indicating the voter is deceased, they will be canceled. If the voter does not receive the card or does not respond, then they remain in Suspense for two Federal Elections, after which their registration is canceled. Voters on Suspense may also complete a form called a Statement of Residence affirming their old address, or updating to a different address within the county."
https://www.khou.com/article/news/verify/verify-texas-purge-suspense-list-voters/285-cfc46283-b2ba-44d1-a1d3-bc1987a479a1
There is alot of drama about the Suspense List and purged voters etc. Factual articles about the Suspense List are hard to come by. This is how it was explained to me by our elections administrator. It's just hard to find anything in writing about it.
Abbott likes to brag about purging voters, but there is a good chance that 463,000 of those on the Suspense List were purged in December 2022.
I notice that he adds, "Since 2021" to his purges and doesn't give the dates when they were purged.
Mass purging of voters 90 days before an election is a violation of federal law. (I think in certain cases a voter can be purged within the 90 days if there is a verified death or felony conviction) However, there is a good chance that Abbott is using scare tactics in his announcement.
There is probably no federal law which regulates when or if Abbott provides "press releases". For instance, I don't think he made a press release in early 2023 about the Suspense List purge. He just waited until August 2024.
There is concern that 6,500 potential non-citizens have been removed. This issue is being pursued by the ACLU and the LWV.
This is important. The odds are the 463,000 Suspense List voters were purged in December 2022 or earlier. That's because the Suspense List is maintained by the counties.
It's good that ACLU and LWV are requesting records.
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/25079983-texas-nvra-letter-final
Demand for Documents. The NVRA requires that Texas, upon request, produce all records concerning the implementation of programs and activities conducted for the purpose of ensuring the accuracy and currency of official lists of eligible voters. 52 U.S.C. § 20507(i)(1).
We therefore request that documents sufficient to show the following be produced promptly:
1. Individualized voter information8 for each of the following voters and voter registration applicants:
a) All registered voters your office identified as potential noncitizens from September 7, 2021 to the present;
b) All registered voters issued notice letters on the basis of alleged non- U.S. citizenship9 from September 7, 2021 to the present; c) All voters canceled, purged, or otherwise removed from the list of eligible voters for alleged non-U.S. citizenship10 from September 7, 2021 to the present;
d) All voters canceled, purged, or otherwise removed from the list of eligible voters for alleged failure to respond to notice of examination based on non-U.S. citizenship11 from September 7, 2021 to the present;
e) All voters canceled, purged, or otherwise removed from the list of eligible voters for any reason other than non-U.S. citizenship or failure to7 respond to notice of examination based on non-U.S. citizenship12 from September 7, 2021 to the present; and
f) All voter registration applicants denied registration due to potential or actual status as a noncitizen from September 7, 2021 to the present;
Federal laws pertaining to voter registration list maintenance:
https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/eac_assets/1/6/FACT_SHEET_-_Voter_Confidence_and_NVRA.pdf
The NVRA allows states to remove voters who have not voted in two consecutive federal general elections
and failed to respond to a confirmation notice from an elections office. Other reasons for removal include death, felony
conviction, having moved from one jurisdiction to another, mental incompetence, or at the voters request.
https://www.eac.gov/blogs/list-maintenance-national-voter-registration-act
GemDigger
(4,327 posts)should release the details on how many from each political party was purged.
LeftInTX
(29,996 posts)In states that register by party, yes that info should be made available.
I do know how the Suspense List works. In December of odd-numbered years all registered voters are to be mailed a replacement voter certificate. That is a non-forwardable piece of mail. If it is returned to the voter registrar as undeliverable then the voter is placed on Suspense and is sent a forwardable Confirmation Notice. If the voter returns the Notice indicating that they still live at the same address, they are returned to Active status.
My son landed on the suspense list. His wife did not. They purchased a newly constructed home and I assume the mail did not get to him. They don't vote in primaries and live in a very red county in a very red precinct. (Mary Lou Retton lives in their neighborhood..LOL). So, it is a formality based on undeliverable mail. There are lots of GOP on the Suspense List too. However, voters who move frequently (renters) are more likely to land on the Suspense List. These tend to be younger voters.
Voters who vote in primaries are much less likely to be purged than voters who do not. So hence people who vote in Democratic primaries and/or Republican primaries are less likely to be purged because participation in elections keeps their voting info current.
GemDigger
(4,327 posts)But... we are talking about republicans and the sudden need for it being requested by republicans. There are also the many who have been purged who should not have been.
LeftInTX
(29,996 posts)They are most concerned about 6,500 possible non-citizens.
It is a violation of federal law to conduct mass purges within 90 days of a general election.
Most of the mass purge was done Dec 2022-Jan 2023. Abbott's press release was in August, but he added "since 2021".
The dates of purge will be on the documents.
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/25079983-texas-nvra-letter-final