As Texas voters attempt to register in droves for the high stakes election between Republican Sen. Ted Cruz and Democratic Rep. Beto O'Rourke, a new report reveals that thousands of voters are having their registration forms unfairly rejected.

Texas saw an increase in registered voters by 11 percent since the last midterm election, as of September 25, NBC affiliate in Austin KXAN reported. But more than 2,000 people in Texas had their voters’ registration applications recently rejected by the Texas Secretary of State, as the San Antonio Express-News reported:

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More than 2,000 potential voters in Texas had their voters’ registration applications unfairly rejected by the Texas Secretary of State, a national advocacy group said Wednesday. Those voters will be barred from voting on Nov. 6 unless they re-submit updated applications with new signatures on them, according to the Secretary of State’s office, which will send affected voters the paperwork by mail. It must be resubmitted to the state within 10 days. Vote.org, a nonpartisan group, said it helped 2,400 Texans from Dallas, Bexar, Cameron and Travis counties submit voter registration applications that use digital photographs of their signatures.

Officials from the Texas Secretary of State’s office argued that they rejected the applications because they did not include a handwritten signature, although lawyers for Vote.org insist that this isn't actually a requirement. The Express-News said that the election law itself is "not clear" as to whether a handwritten signature is necessary because it requires voter registration forms to be "submitted by personal delivery, by mail, or by telephonic facsimile machine" as well as "in writing and signed by the applicant."

READ MORE: Beto O'Rourke & Martin O'Malley: the dark horse ticket that could beat Trump in 2020

It is also unclear whether the Texas Republican Party has any reason to worry about a potential influx of pro-O'Rourke, anti-Cruz voters.

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"To borrow a phrase from a cult film classic, the problem with young voters is we get older and they stay the same age," Dallas Morning News reporter James Barragán observed during an interview on the State of Texas politics program. "You've got to keep reaching out to them and keep teaching them how to register to vote," he explained.

"It's a constant battle, and that's been a battle that's been difficult here in Texas," Barragán said.

This hasn't stopped O'Rourke from approaching the upcoming election from a "turn out as many voters as possible" point of view. The Valley Morning Star wrote a piece on how this is being done in the Rio Grande Valley.

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