Communiqué de presse
Les membres de la Chambre des représentants du Texas proposent un projet de loi qui pourrait coûter des millions aux contribuables et endommager les machines de vote
Common Cause Texas Responds
Two dozen House Republicans have proposed legislation to require a third-party review of 2020 election results in large counties.
In other states, election officials have had to replace their voting machines after pursuing similar reviews. Taxpayers in Fulton County, Pennsylvania, have already had to pay to replace their voting machines, after Wake TSI was allowed to access them. Voting machines in Maricopa County, Arizona have been tainted by Cyber Ninjas’ actions — and will cost almost $3 million to replace. Republican officials in York and Tioga counties in Pennsylvania have cited the cost of replacing voting machines as a reason for not participating in private-party reviews of their elections.
Déclaration du directeur exécutif de Common Cause Texas, Anthony Gutierrez
La décision de politiser nos élections en procédant à un examen partisan des bulletins de vote ne fera qu’accroître la méfiance envers notre démocratie et laissera les contribuables texans payer la facture. Ce n’est rien d’autre qu’un plan partisan et lâche destiné à nous distraire et à nous diviser.
What Texas Republicans are proposing is not an audit. It is a sham ballot review meant to fuel distrust in our elections and manufacture justifications for bills making it even harder to vote. It comes just weeks after the same leaders passed legislation in the middle of the night to make it harder for Texans to vote. There is no question: this is just another partisan attempt to not just silence voters’ voices but overturn the will of the people.
There’s also no question: this will have costs to taxpayers — costs that will almost certainly be in the millions, costs that are completely unnecessary. No effort to undermine our faith in our elections is worthy of our democracy or our tax dollars, and neither is this partisan spectacle.
As of December 9, 2020, all 50 states — including Texas — had certified the 2020 presidential election results. On January 6, despite a violent insurrection at our nation’s Capitol, Congress certified the election results and President Joe Biden and Texas elected leaders took office in January 2021.
The 2020 election is over.
The people of Texas, undeterred by a deadly pandemic, made their voices heard at the ballot box last November. Eight months after the election, it’s time our elected leaders get on with the business of this state and do the job they were elected to do.