Home / Dallas News / Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick says GOP elections bill is on course to pass Legislature

Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick says GOP elections bill is on course to pass Legislature

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said Friday that he expected the Legislature to approve an elections bill in short order, with the Senate passing its version of the controversial legislation next week.

Patrick defended what he called Republican efforts to secure Texas elections, saying that critics of the legislation were distorting the issue. He insisted that most Texans agreed with GOP election reform efforts, an assertion that is backed up by various polls.

And Patrick said the current Senate bill, which will be debated in the Elections Committee this weekend, is better than the version Democrats killed in the regular session by walking out of the House chamber and breaking quorum.

“People want a paper trail to back up their vote,” Patrick said in Dallas after addressing the Conservative Political Action Conference. “They like the idea that we’re not allowing our machines to be hooked to the internet, so no one can hack it. But they are glad we are putting security on our mail-in ballots because that’s where fraud can and does happen.”

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick spoke at the CPAC meeting in Dallas on Friday as  Matt Schlapp watched.
Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick spoke at the CPAC meeting in Dallas on Friday as Matt Schlapp watched. (LM Otero)

In addition to those items, the GOP bills would ban drive-through and 24-hour voting and absentee ballot drop off boxes. The legislation would expand the access of partisan poll watchers, and the Senate version would establish monthly comparisons of Department of Public Safety driver records with voter rolls to find potential noncitizen voters.

But Democrats on Friday said the elections legislation was unnecessary. Senate Democrats touted their own bill — the Barbara Jordan Act, named after the first Black woman state senator — that would, among other things, allow online and same-day voter registration and allow all voters to request mail-in ballots.

“It’s a solution looking for a problem that doesn’t exist,” state Sen. Royce West of Dallas said of the GOP legislation. “We will continue to fight against the bill and push legislation that encourages voting.”

State Rep. Chris Turner of Grand Prairie, who leads the House Democratic Caucus, agreed.

“While some of the egregious stuff has been taken out, there’s still some problematic things in the bills, including items related to poll watchers and mail-in ballot applications,” Turner said. “It’s all based on a big lie that Trump won the election.”

Patrick’s view

Patrick told that it was unfair and incorrect to call the elections proposal a voter suppression bill. He said Texas has increased voter turnout 40% since 2011, when a voter ID law was approved.

“We’re not rolling back anything,” Patrick said. “I take it personally when they say that we’re trying to stop anyone from voting, because in Texas we lead the country in increasing voting turnout. As Republicans, we would never do anything to stop anyone from any background or any party from voting.”

Patrick said one controversial provision from the regular session’s proposal was not added to the current Senate proposal. That proposal would have mandated that early voting on Sunday not occur until 1 p.m., which is the time polling opens on Sundays in Dallas County. Other counties, including Tarrant, open their polling places earlier on Sundays, so the provision led some critics to blast the GOP bill and helped spur the Democratic Party walkout.

But Patrick said the issue was overblown, adding that the provision had been added to the earlier bill by a lawyer for the Texas House. Whatever the case, Patrick said he was proud of the current bill.

“It’s better and stronger than SB 7,” he said.

Attacking Biden, Dems

Patrick was in Dallas to address CPAC’s meeting in Dallas.

During his speech, he unleashed a blistering attack against President Joe Biden and Democrats, contending that the new president was allowing immigrants to illegally cross the nation’s southern border in order to turn them into voters.

“What’s happening on the border today is not an accident. It’s a designed plan,” Patrick said of the administration “letting” people pour across the border. “They want to turn them into to citizens, turn them into voters and take over this country.”

Patrick’s comments were part of a robust defense of Texas’ brand of conservatism, which he said was important to maintain a thriving Republican Party.

Gov. Greg Abbott has directed the state to finish the border wall started by then-President Donald Trump. Trump joined Abbott and Patrick earlier this month for an event at the border.

Abbott is not scheduled to speak at the CPAC convention.

Guzman makes her case

Patrick was one of several Texans to appear on the program.

Former Texas Supreme Court justice and 2022 attorney general candidate Eva Guzman, who also spoke Friday, also stressed the importance of maintaining a secure border.

She said that some people attribute illegal border crossings to refugees escaping bad circumstances in their home countries.

“It’s not that simple,” Guzman said. “It’s an issue of law and order, national security and safety.”

She added that the “blessings of America” should be shared with people who “share our values and respect our laws.”

Guzman said that if elected attorney general, she would sue the federal government to force officials to secure the border.

“It’s time to hold the federal government accountable,” she said.

Guzman is running for attorney general in next year’s GOP primary against incumbent Ken Paxton and Land Commissioner George P. Bush.

Praise for Trump

Patrick piled heavy praise on Trump, recalling a conversation he had with the former president during his last Texas trip.

The lieutenant governor chaired Trump’s successful Texas campaign against Biden.

Former President Donald Trump and Gov. Greg Abbott, flanked by Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, attended a security briefing with state officials and law enforcement in Weslaco before touring the border wall June 30.
Former President Donald Trump and Gov. Greg Abbott, flanked by Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, attended a security briefing with state officials and law enforcement in Weslaco before touring the border wall June 30.(Jabin Botsford)

“He looked over and he said to me, ‘Dan, are you ready for one more in 2024?’” Patrick told the jubilant crowd at the Hilton Anatole.

Trump is scheduled to address the convention Sunday, and there’s speculation that he’ll mount another presidential campaign in 2024.

“I don’t know what Donald Trump is going to do in 2024,” Patrick said, “but I can assure you that his willingness to fight and stand up is honored here in Texas.”

Patrick promised that Texas would continue to be the “capital of conservatism” and “the last man standing.”

“If we fall, America falls,” he said. “We’re not ever going to let that happen.”

The lieutenant governor guaranteed that Republicans would roll up victories in next year’s midterm elections.

“We will keep this a red state,” Patrick said. “And in 2024, Trumpism will rise again.”

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