Houston Area Urban League (HAUL) v. Abbott is a lawsuit challenging S.B. 1, a Texas law that greatly restricts access to voting. S.B. 1 includes several suppressive voting provisions that will make it much harder for Texans to vote and disenfranchise some altogether, particularly Black and Latino voters and voters with disabilities. HAUL v. Abbott was filed in 2021 by the LDF, Reed Smith LLP, ArentFox Schiff, and The Arc on behalf of the Houston Area Urban League (HAUL), Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., The Arc of Texas, and Jeffrey Lamar Clemmons, a poll worker. LDF’s case is consolidated with four other lawsuits under LUPE, et al. v. Abbott, et al. Trial began on September 11, 2023.
The lawsuit argues that S.B. 1 violates the First, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution and Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act by targeting and burdening methods and means of voting used by voters of color. Additionally, the plaintiffs argue the law violates the Americans with Disabilities Act, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and Section 208 of the Voting Rights Act by imposing voting barriers that will discriminate against voters with disabilities and deny people with disabilities full and equal opportunities to participate in the state’s voting programs.
The lawsuit challenges multiple provisions in S.B. 1, including its limitations on early voting hours and a ban on 24-hour voting; the elimination of drive-thru voting centers; limitations on multiple drop-off locations for mail ballots; limitations on the distribution of mail-in ballot applications; limitations and possible penalties for voter assistants, including criminal felonies; expansion of the authority of partisan poll watchers; and criminal penalties against poll workers seeking to maintain order at the polling place.
On July 14, 2022, a federal court struck down some provisions of Texas’ S.B. 1 that illegally restrict necessary assistance to limited English-speaking voters and voters with disabilities. Texas officials declined to appeal this ruling. The court’s ruling means that that these provisions of S.B. 1 are permanently enjoined and cannot be enforced.
Since the case was filed, Texas has held several local and state elections, including the 2022 midterms, in which LDF’s clients and their members documented the increased difficulty in voting caused by S.B. 1.