The Markup: Weekly Election Legislation Update for Monday, May 16

by Liz Avore

May 16, 2022

Welcome back to another edition of our weekly legislative update. Please consider forwarding The Markup to your colleagues and friends so that we can get this valuable information into more hands.

If you would like to get these weekly updates straight to your inbox going forward, please subscribe here.


Today is Monday, May 16. We are tracking 2,131 bills so far this session, with 573 bills that restrict voter access or election administration and 1,015 bills that improve voter access or election administration. The rest are neutral, mixed or unclear in their impact. You may have noticed a drop-off in bill numbers from last week. Don’t worry, you didn’t miss any major legislative movement in the states – we just decided to no longer track legislation related to redistricting. Those bills will no longer be reflected in the Tracker moving forward.

The Bad News: Strict voter ID bills are headed to the governors’ desks in Missouri and New HampshireKansas enacted new legislation interfering with election administration and restricting voter access.

The Good News: South Carolina created in-person early voting for the first time, and the same Missouri bill that enacts strict voter ID rules will also guarantee early in-person voting. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (the highest court in Texas) ordered a lower court to reconsider Crystal Mason’s conviction because it failed to find proof that Mason knew it was a crime for her to vote while on supervised release.

Looking Ahead: Several elections bills remain pending in Arizona, but legislators there are only meeting sporadically due to a continued impasse in budget negotiations.

Here are the details:

A new South Carolina law creates in-person early voting for the first time in the state. Late on Friday, Governor Henry McMaster signed S.B. 108, a new law that will open polling places for in-person early voting for a period of two weeks before Election Day. Prior to the enactment of this new law, South Carolina was one of only six states that did not offer early voting. The bill does also restrict absentee voting in certain ways, including a prohibition on drop boxes and a requirement for voters to provide a specific ID number when applying for an absentee ballot. South Carolina is one of 17 states that still require an excuse to vote by mail.

Missouri’s legislation creating in-person early voting, but also stricter voter ID, is headed to the governor. Both chambers of the Missouri legislature took final votes on H.B. 1878 last week, and the bill is now ready for the governor’s signature. This bill would create two weeks of in-person early voting for the first time, allowing Missouri voters to cast a ballot in-person prior to Election Day via in-person absentee voting. Following enactment of the new South Carolina law, Missouri is now one of only five states that does not offer in-person early voting. The bill would also make the state’s ID law more strict by requiring photo ID for all in-person voting in the state. Under existing Missouri law, voters are permitted to provide a variety of ID types, including certain types of non-photo ID.

New Hampshire’s strict voter ID bill passed both chambers and is now headed to the governor. The Senate concurred with the House version of S.B. 418 last week, so the bill – which would make the state’s voter ID law much more restrictive – is now headed to the governor’s desk. Current New Hampshire law allows voters without ID to cast a regular ballot if they complete an affidavit affirming their identity, under penalty of perjury. This bill would eliminate that alternative for some voters. Most states with voter ID laws offer an alternative method of voting to ensure the identity of voters without ID can still be verified. This new bill would put New Hampshire in the minority of states by doing away with that option.

A Texas appeals court must reconsider conviction for a woman who voted using a provisional ballot while on supervised release. Crystal Mason was convicted of illegally voting in 2018 and sentenced to five years in prison despite the fact that her ballot was ultimately rejected and she contended she was encouraged by election workers to cast a provisional ballot. An appeals court upheld the ruling two years later, but last Wednesday, the highest court in Texas ordered that court to reconsider its ruling because it failed to require proof that Mason had actual knowledge that it was a crime for her to vote while on supervised release. During the 2021 legislative session, House members attempted to amend the voting statute to require prosecutors to prove the specific intent to cast a ballot while ineligible to do so, but that amendment ultimately failed.

Kansas enacted new legislation interfering with election administration and restricting voter access. Kansas enacted a new law requiring election officials to begin the process to purge voters from voter registration lists if they do not cast a ballot for four years. Under current Kansas law, as in most states, non-voting does not trigger a removal process. The new law also requires election reviews through an unspecified process that targets certain jurisdictions.


This update is powered by VRL’s State Voting Rights Tracker: tracker.votingrightslab.org

Don’t forget to subscribe to The Markup to get our updates straight to your inbox.