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Stacey Abrams rips Texas' new voting law as 'anti-patriotic' during San Antonio speaking appearance
By Sanford Nowlin
Tags: Stacey Abrams, San Antonio, Tobin Center, voter mobilization, voting rights, Ursula Pari, Georgia, governor of Georgia, KSAT-12, Texas voting law, texas voting restrictions, voter suppression, Gov. Greg Abbott, Texas legislature, Texas Republicans, Democratic Party, Tobin Center for the Performing Arts, U.S. Senate, voting bills, poll watchers, vote by mail, drive-thru voting, mail-in voting, Donald Trump, unpatriotic, anti-patriotic
Democrats in Texas House flying to Washington in bid to shut down voter-restriction bill
Tags: Texas legislature, Democratic walkout, flying to Washington D.C., voting rights, voter suppression, Gov. Greg Abbott, quorum, Val Benavidez, Texas Freedom Network, Texas politics, mail-in voting, drive-thru voting, election law, Republicans, Texas GOP, special Session, Texas House
GOP voting bills advance in Texas House and Senate after overnight committee hearings
By Alexa Ura and Cassandra Pollock, The Texas Tribune
Tags: Texas, voting rights, voter suppression, voting restrictions, Texas legislature, special session, Gov. Greg Abbott, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, Senate Bill 1, House Bill 3, drive-thru voting, voter fraud, voter rolls, poll watchers, Crystal Mason, citizenship checks, Texas House, Texas Senate, voting hours, mail-in ballots, voting by mail, Harris County, voting hours, voter ID, voting laws, voting bills
What's in the new voting restriction legislation introduced in the Texas House and Senate
By Alexa Ura, The Texas Tribune
In defending voter-suppression bill, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick falsely claims most people of color don't own cars
Tags: Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, people of color, vehicles, cars, car ownership, drive-thru voting, Texas politics, Politifact, ieutenant governor, voter suppression, voter fraud, Texas Legislature, Texas Senate, voting rights, blacks, latinos, asians, mixed race, white, native, U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey
Analysis: Texas’ proposed voting restrictions have more to do with 2018 than 2020
By Ross Ramsey, The Texas Tribune
Tags: Texas Legislature, Dan Patrick, Greg Abbott, voter restrictions, voting restrictions, voter suppression, Senate Bill 7, House Bill 6, 2020 election, 2018 election, Ken Paxton, Sid Miller, Donald Trump, voting issues, mail-in ballots, drive-thru voting
Texas Republicans begin pursuing new voting restrictions as they work to protect their hold on power
Tags: Voting rights, voting restrictions, Republicans, GOP, Texas, Garnet Coleman, Senate Bill 7, Senate Bill 8, Drive-thru voting, poll watchers, Briscoe Cain, mail-in ballots, mail-in voting, Texas Republicans, Texas Governor, Greg Abbott, Texas politics, Texas Department of Public Safety, Texas Civil Rights Project, Jared Patterson, Paul Bettencourt, Brennan Center for Justice, voter suppression, Donald Trump, election fraud
Despite record turnout, some Texas voters were still shut out
By Karen Brooks Harper, The Texas Tribune
Tags: Texas, voting, voter suppression, Chad Dunn, Texas Democratic Party, mail-in ballots, voting by mail, absentee ballots, pandemic, covid-19, covid 19, coronavirus, corona virus, Crystal Zermeño, Texas Organizing Project, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Election Data + Science Lab, Democracy fund, voter ID, drive-thru voting, Houston, lawsuits, Jared Woodfill, turnout, Republicans, Democrats
Nearly 127,000 Harris County drive-thru votes appear safe after federal judge rejects GOP-led Texas lawsuit
By Jolie McCullough, The Texas Tribune
Tags: Judge Andrew Hanen, Harris County, Houston, drive-thru voting, federal judge, Texas supreme court, 2020 election, November election, ACLU of Texas, NAACP, League of Women Voters of Texas, House Speaker Joe Straus, Texas’ MJ Hegar, voter suppression, Steven Hotze, Steve Toth, Wendell Champion, Sharon Hemphill, Texas, Texas politics
Here's how votes are counted in Texas
By Hanna Kozlowska, Votebeat
Tags: Texas, Voting, how votes are counted, vote counting, 2020 election, November election, 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Election Day, Bexar County, FiveThirtyEight, Harris County, Supreme Court, drive-thru voting, secretary of state's office, Tarrant County, mail-in ballots, absentee ballots, mail-in voting, manual counts
Texas' ability to run accessible, efficient elections is being tested this year. Will Bexar County flunk?
Tags: Bexar County, voting, Bexar County Elections Administrator, Jacque Callanen, Justin Rodriguez, polling locations, AT&T Center, MOVE Texas, Houston, drive-thru voting, lawsuit, Tejano Democrats, Richard Gonzalez, Texas Organizing Project, Texas Civil Rights Project, Nelson Wolff, San Antonio, H. Drew Galloway, Trey Martinez Fischer, 2020 election, November election, mega voting sites
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San Antonio Spurs accidentally confirm team is looking to relocate downtown
By Michael Karlis
Could Steph Curry, LeBron James end up in San Antonio? Some sports bettors think so.
Popular Salad and Go concept expanding its San Antonio footprint
By Nina Rangel
Selena tribute beer stops production after Quintanilla family sends cease-and-desist letter
A sprawling Castle Hills estate built in 1972 has hit the market for $895,000, and it retains plenty of its funky vintage…
By San Antonio Current Staff
A historic home that got a Japanese-style makeover in the 1950s by the owners of San Antonio's Dailey Liquors chain has hit…
For the first time, Fiesta Fiesta — the kickoff event for San Antonio's annual citywide party — took place at H-E-B Plaza…
Great dining spots abound in San Antonio, but things can get complicated when you have kids in tow. Fortunately, many Alamo City…
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