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  • As the United States’ death toll raced toward 100,000, Donald Trump went golfing. The number of deaths never had to reach such a staggering figure — and it will surely climb far beyond it — but it did because in the early days, Trump made excuses for the Chinese response, dragged his feet on an […] More

  • State legislatures are still a threat to appointing electors contrary to the will of their voters. More

  • First race of the Democratic primary season still too close to call ‘I think we should move on to New Hampshire,’ says Sanders Help us cover the critical issues of 2020. Consider making a contribution 3.09pm GMT Senator Bernie Sanders is scheduled to speak this morning at a quirky event that’s become a New Hampshire […] More

  • Hervis Rogers was ineligible to cast a ballot in the 2020 presidential primary because he was still on parole, according to the state’s attorney general. He now faces four decades in prison.A 62-year-old Texas man who waited hours to cast a ballot in last year’s presidential primary was arrested this week on charges that he had voted illegally.The man, Hervis Earl Rogers of Houston, waited seven hours outside Texas Southern University to vote in the state’s presidential primary in March 2020. On Wednesday, he was arrested and charged with two counts of illegal voting, a felony. According to court documents, the charges stem from ballots that Mr. Rogers cast on March 3, 2020, and on Nov. 6, 2018, while he was still on parole and not legally permitted to vote.Tommy Buser-Clancy, a senior staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas and one of the lawyers representing Mr. Rogers, said that Mr. Rogers thought that he could vote during the primary.“Mr. Rogers’s prosecution really shows the danger of overcriminalizing the election code and the process of participating in a democratic society,” he said. “In particular, it raises the danger that criminal statutes in the election code are being used to go after individuals who at worst have made an innocent mistake. That’s not what any laws should be doing.”Mr. Buser-Clancy said that the A.C.L.U. was conducting its own investigation into the charges.Texas election code states that a person convicted of a felony can register to vote and participate in elections only once his or her sentence — including parole — is fully completed. Texas’ election laws also stipulate that a person must knowingly vote illegally to be guilty of a crime.The Sentencing Project, a criminal-justice nonprofit, estimates that 5.2 million Americans remain disenfranchised because of felony convictions, a disproportionate number of them Black. According to a report the group released last year, over 6.2 percent of the adult African American population is disenfranchised, compared with 1.7 percent of the non-African American population. In Texas, 2.8 percent of voters cannot vote because of felony convictions.Experts say that disparities in sentencing can make felony voting laws inherently discriminatory against minorities and people with low incomes. And the process for former felons to return to the voter rolls can be confusing, with muddled and frequently changing rules, making it difficult for people trying to vote legally to know what to do.Mr. Rogers’s story ricocheted around social media after he was identified as the very last person in line to vote at his polling place. Houston Public Media reported at the time that Mr. Rogers arrived at the polls just before 7 p.m. and waited roughly six hours to vote, long after the polls had closed and many others had left the line.“It is insane, but it’s worth it,” Mr. Rogers told Houston Public Media while waiting in line.Mr. Rogers was being held at the Montgomery County Jail with bail set at $100,000. He could face upward of 40 years in prison — 20 years for each charge, according to Mr. Buser-Clancy, who added that Mr. Rogers’s past criminal record meant that the sentence could be even higher.“He’s facing the possibility of an extremely harsh sentence,” he said. “Second-degree felonies are normally reserved for aggravated assault, and to apply it to Mr. Rogers’s case, it just shows how unjust that is.”Texas’ attorney general, Ken Paxton, who is under investigation for professional misconduct after he challenged President Biden’s win in court, brought the charges against Mr. Rogers. He has made it a mission of his office to prosecute voter-fraud cases, which are very rare in the United States and tend to be minor mistakes when they do happen.“Hervis is a felon rightly barred from voting under TX law,” Mr. Paxton wrote on Twitter. “I prosecute voter fraud everywhere we find it!”Republicans in Texas and other battleground states have been pushing aggressively to restrict voting laws since former President Donald J. Trump began making false claims that the 2020 election was stolen from him. On Thursday, Republicans in the Texas Legislature presented plans to overhaul the state’s election apparatus for a second time this year. They outlined a raft of proposed new restrictions on voting access that would be among the most far-reaching election laws passed this year.For some, Mr. Rogers’s case evoked another recent prosecution in the state.In 2017, Crystal Mason was sentenced to five years in prison for casting a provisional ballot in the 2016 presidential election while she was on supervised release for a federal tax fraud felony. Her provisional ballot was not counted, and her case is pending before Texas’ highest criminal appellate court after Ms. Mason filed for an appeal.After she was convicted, Ms. Mason served 10 months in federal prison for violating her supervised release, but she has remained free on a $20,000 bond in her voting case, as she pursues her appeal in state court, her lawyer, Alison Grinter, said. If Ms. Mason loses her appeal, she will have to begin serving her five-year sentence, Ms. Grinter said.Mr. Rogers and Ms. Mason may meet in the coming weeks, Ms. Grinter said.“They share a bond that neither of them wanted at this point,” Ms. Grinter said. “She really feels for him, and knows what it feels like to be made political sport of like this.”On Friday, Ms. Mason expressed support for Mr. Rogers.“I wish this had never happened to you,” Ms. Mason wrote on Twitter. “I’m sorry that you’re going though this. Welcome to the fight.”Michael Levenson More

  • A majority of Republicans still believe Donald Trump won the 2020 US presidential election and blame his loss to Joe Biden on baseless claims of illegal voting, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll.The 17-19 May national poll found that 53% of Republicans believe Trump, their party’s nominee, is the “true president” now, compared with 3% of Democrats and 25% of all Americans.About one-quarter of adults believe the 3 November election was tainted by false allegations of illegal voting, including 56% of Republicans, according to the poll. The figures were roughly the same in a poll that ran from 13-17 November which found that 28% of all Americans and 59% of Republicans felt that way.Biden, a Democrat, won by more than 7m votes. Dozens of courts rejected Trump’s challenges to the results, but Trump and his supporters have persisted in pushing baseless conspiracy theories on conservative news outlets.US federal and state officials have said repeatedly they have no evidence that votes were compromised or altered during the presidential election, rejecting the unsubstantiated claims of widespread fraud advanced by Trump and many of his supporters. Voter fraud is extremely rare in the US.Yet the Reuters/Ipsos poll showed that 61% of Republicans believe the election was “stolen” from Trump. Only about 29% of Republicans believe he should share some of the blame for his supporters’ 6 January deadly attack at the US Capitol, after Trump gave an inflammatory speech encouraging the crowds. The former president was impeached by the House earlier this year for “incitement of insurrection”.Still, 67% of overall respondents say they trust election officials in their town to do their job honestly, including 58% of Republicans, according to the poll.The November and May polls were both conducted online, in English, throughout the United States. The May poll gathered responses from 2,007 adults, including 909 Democrats and 754 Republicans. The poll has a credibility interval, a measure of precision, of about four percentage points. More

World Politics

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European Politics

  • in European Politics

    Germany's €100-billion army fund: a remarkable change in post-war policy in response to the Ukraine crisis

    1 March 2022, 15:05

  • in European Politics

    US troops head to Eastern Europe: 4 essential reads on the Ukraine crisis

    2 February 2022, 21:01

  • in European Politics

    Péter Márki-Zay: Hungarian opposition's 'non-political' candidate may not be enough to beat Orbán

    20 October 2021, 11:50

  • in European Politics

    Gibraltar reform is a small – but important – step for abortion rights in Europe

    29 June 2021, 10:08

  • in European Politics

    Jürgen Conings: the case of a Belgian soldier on the run shows how the pandemic collides with far-right extremism

    16 June 2021, 12:24

  • in European Politics

    Will European countries ever take meaningful steps to end colonial legacies?

    22 February 2021, 11:13

  • in European Politics

    Unrest in the US has prompted soul-searching in Europe

    18 January 2021, 12:01

  • in European Politics

    The end of Golden Dawn: has Greece shown us how to deal with neo-Nazis?

    26 November 2020, 11:32

  • in European Politics

    How COVID-19 is shaping the way Europeans think about politicians

    28 October 2020, 10:01

UK Politics

  • in UK Politics

    Priti Patel to grab new powers to stamp out ‘mob rule’ of Just Stop Oil protests

    21 May 2022, 21:30

  • in UK Politics

    Rishi Sunak spends £500,000 of taxpayers’ cash on focus groups ‘to repair his image’

    21 May 2022, 15:08

  • in UK Politics

    Boris Johnson and Sue Gray clash over ‘secret meeting’ about Partygate report

    21 May 2022, 14:52

  • in UK Politics

    Parliament could burn down ‘any day’, says Andrea Leadsom

    21 May 2022, 14:38

  • in UK Politics

    Conservative peer who helped to set up universal credit system calls for urgent benefits increase

    21 May 2022, 13:32

  • in UK Politics

    UK scientists stripped of leadership roles for Europe-wide projects in fresh Brexit clash

    21 May 2022, 13:13

  • in UK Politics

    Boris Johnson ‘must urgently explain’ why he met Sue Gray to discuss her Partygate report

    21 May 2022, 11:19

  • in UK Politics

    Moldova should be armed ‘to Nato standard’ to guard against Russia, says Truss

    20 May 2022, 23:17

  • in UK Politics

    Plan to prevent food shortages amid fears of ‘biggest rail strike in modern history’

    20 May 2022, 22:58

US Politics

  • ‘America could be truly free’: John Legend on his fight to overhaul the criminal justice system

  • Could this tough-on-crime billionaire be LA’s next mayor?

  • Ginni Thomas urged Arizona Republicans to overturn 2020 result – report

  • Trump pays $110,000 in fines after being held in contempt of court – as it happened

  • Oh no. Is Jeff Bezos preparing to run for office? | Hamilton Nolan

  • Conservatives want to make the US more like Hungary. A terrifying thought | Andrew Gawthorpe

  • Trump loyalist’s primary win prompts election fears in Pennsylvania

Elections

  • Scott Morrison Concedes Defeat to Labor Party in Australian Election

  • Anthony Albanese to Become Australian Prime Minister

  • Perdue Had Trump. In Georgia, Kemp Had Everything Else.

  • Bush Dynasty, Its Influence Fading, Pins Hopes on One Last Stand in Texas

  • Hochul’s Lt. Governor Pick Says He Is Afro-Latino. Some Latinos Object.

  • Lucy McBath and Carolyn Bourdeaux Battle Over A Georgia District

  • Judge Approves N.Y. House Map, Cementing Chaos for Democrats

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