A three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Thursday that Texas can keep its strict eligibility rules for voting by mail.
Siding with the state’s Republican leadership, the appellate judges rejected the Texas Democratic Party’s effort to expand eligibility for voting by mail to all registered voters based on their argument that the state’s age restrictions for such voting violate the 26th Amendment’s protections against voting rules that discriminate based on age.
The panel of appellate judges ultimately found that “conferring a privilege” to some voters — in this case the option of voting by mail to voters 65 and older — does not alone violate the 26th Amendment.
“In sum, the plaintiffs based their Twenty-Sixth Amendment claim on the argument that differential treatment in allowing voters aged 65 and older to vote by mail without excuse constitutes, at least during the pandemic, a denial or abridgment of a younger citizen’s right to vote on account of age,” the panel wrote. “This claim fails because adding a benefit to another class of voters does not deny or abridge the plaintiffs’ Twenty-Sixth Amendment right to vote.”
The federal panel vacated a lower court’s sweeping ruling that found Texas voters would face irreparable harm if existing age eligibility rules for voting by mail were in place for elections held while the new coronavirus remains in wide circulation. On Thursday, state Democrats indicated they would push forward with their challenge at the lower court, where the appellate court sent the case for further consideration of the party’s remaining arguments against the state’s restrictions.
Texas allows any voter 65 or older to automatically qualify for a mail-in ballot. Younger voters can qualify if they will be out of the county during the election period, are confined in jail but otherwise eligible, or if they cite a disability or illness that makes a trip to the polls a risky endeavor.
The case is on track to the U.S. Supreme Court, which previously rejected a bid by the Texas Democratic Party to fast-track its consideration of the case ahead of November. But it’s becoming increasingly unclear whether the matter will be resolved in time to expand voting by mail for the general election.
Texas is nearing the start of absentee voting for the November election. Voters who have already requested absentee ballots should be receiving them in the next few weeks. The deadline to request a mail-in ballot in Texas is Oct. 23 — 11 days out from Election Day. But the U.S. Postal Service recommends voters get their requests in at least 15 days out.
The state appealed to the 5th Circuit after U.S. District Judge Fred Biery ruled in May that Texas must allow all voters “who seek to vote by mail to avoid transmission of the virus” to cast absentee ballots during the pandemic even if they wouldn’t ordinarily qualify under state election law. Biery agreed with Texas Democrats’ argument that the age limitation for voting by mail is unconstitutional because it imposes additional burdens on voters who are younger than 65 during the pandemic.
That ruling had been on hold while the 5th Circuit considered Texas’ appeal.
During a virtual hearing Aug. 31, the discussion centered in part on what constituted denying or abridging the right to vote based on age. Texas Solicitor General Kyle Hawkins argued that the state’s decision to set up voting by mail for Texans 65 and older did not “erect a barrier to the exercise of the franchise for everybody else.”
If the case turns on a close reading of the 26th Amendment — and a determination on what it means to deny or abridge the right to vote — then the state has not reached a constitutional violation, Hawkins told the three-judge panel.
“Offering other groups more choices doesn’t abridge anybody else’s right to vote,” Hawkins said.
Chad Dunn, a lawyer for the Texas Democratic Party, argued that giving voters in one age group a voting option but denying it to voters in another age group was just as unconstitutional as giving white voters a voting option denied to Black voters.
“Age is no different,” Dunn said.
The state is not without options to facilitate voting for certain voters, Dunn said, offering as an example the possibility of placing a polling location next to a care facility for older people as long as that placement was not intended to or did not have the effect of discriminating against young voters.
“What the state can’t do by statute is say a bracket of people based on their age get a voting benefit that other people don’t,” Dunn said.
But the panel disagreed.
“Rejecting the plaintiffs’ arguments, we hold that an election law abridges a person’s right to vote for the purposes of the Twenty-Sixth Amendment only if it makes voting more difficult for that person than it was before the law was enacted or enforced,” the judges wrote.
The panel was made up by Judges Carolyn Dineen King, who was appointed to the bench by President Jimmy Carter; Carl Stewart, who was appointed by Bill Clinton; and Leslie H. Southwick, who was appointed by George W. Bush.
Dissenting in part to the majority opinion, Stewart wrote that the state’s eligibility rules fail to “treat members of the electorate equally with regard to mail-in voting.”
“This unequal treatment is discriminatory in normal times and dangerous in the time of a global pandemic,” Stewart wrote. “Though all individuals can seemingly vote in person, those without the opportunity to vote by mail have less opportunity to participate than others.”
The lawsuit over age limitations for voting by mail is just one in a long roster of legal challenges to the state’s voting processes during the coronavirus pandemic. But the state, so far, has been largely successful in fending off any changes that could be imposed through the courts. The primary way in which Texas has adjusted voting rules during the pandemic is by extending the early voting period, motioning toward its preference for in-person voting.
Early voting for the November general election begins Oct. 13.
The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.
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