Texas and the DOJ reached an agreement that allows the agency to send monitors, providing they do not enter polling locations. DOJ election monitors must stay outside of central count and polling ...
The U.S. Department of Justice changed course and agreed to not send election monitors into polling places in eight Texas ...
Paxton's office says the DOJ agreed on Monday night that poll watchers will not enter Texas polling and central count locations. The monitors will remain outside, at least 100 feet away from the ...
After Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a last-minute lawsuit Monday to stop the U.S. Department of Justice ... release did not say whether staff would enter polling locations.
The federal agency agreed their monitors would remain outside polling locations ... Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton argued in a lawsuit filed Monday that the Justice Department did not have ...
(The Center Square) – Within a few hours of being sued, the U.S. Department of Justice agreed not to interfere ... would be permitted to enter any polling places in Texas. Nelson sent a letter ...
The agreement reached on Tuesday states that monitors can be within 100 feet of Texas polling locations ... where DOJ monitors are expected to send staff. Byrd did not immediately return a request ...
Declaring that Texas will 'not be bullied by the Department of Justice,' the state ... the feds and Paxton agreed to allow monitors outside voting locations to ensure Texans' civil rights are ...
A U.S. district court judge ruled against Republican leaders who sought to bar federal monitors from polling sites in St. Louis County on Election Day.
The DOJ agreed their monitors in eight Texas counties will remain outside and at least 100 feet away from polling and central count locations ... election monitors are not permitted inside ...