Poll workers and poll watchers are allowed at the polling sites, it’s the federal poll monitors that are being asked by the ...
The Department of Justice said it would send federal election monitors to polling locations in 8 Texas counties. Attorney ...
The U.S. Department of Justice changed course and agreed to not send election monitors into polling places in eight Texas ...
Texas AG Ken Paxton won against the DOJ to prevent federal election monitors inside polling locations, with both sides ...
Within a few hours of being sued, the U.S. Department of Justice agrees not to interfere in Tuesday’s election process in ...
Under an agreement, Texas acknowledged the Department of Justice's right to have observers outside polling stations and ...
Following 11th-hour efforts to prevent federal observers from monitoring Texas polling stations, the state reached an ...
The federal agency agreed their monitors would remain outside polling locations and wouldn’t interfere with voting.
“Texans run Texas elections, and we will not be bullied by the Department of Justice,” Paxton said in a statement Tuesday.
Missouri and Florida have also vowed to oppose the DOJ’s measures, arguing that state law “strictly limits” who is authorized to be at polling locations.
U.S. judges have denied requests from the Republican-led states of Missouri and Texas to block the federal government from ...
"Texans run Texas elections, and we will not be bullied by the Department of Justice," Paxton said in a statement. "The DOJ ...