Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ballot officials fear effects of GOP bills

- ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE

Citing the need for ballot and election security, some Republican­s are creating a new slate of potential punishment­s for the county officials who run U.S. elections, arguing they oversteppe­d their authority when they expanded voter access during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

There is agreement among experts that there was no widespread fraud or problems that compromise­d the results of the 2020 election.

It’s not unusual for lawmakers to reassess voting regulation­s after an election. But the GOP push this year, based on former President Donald Trump’s claims of a stolen election, has garnered intense scrutiny.

Penalties for election officials’ missteps have become law in Iowa, Georgia and Florida, and they are making their way through statehouse­s in Texas and elsewhere.

Election officials have responded with warnings of a chilling effect on those responsibl­e for administer­ing the vote and counting ballots, raising fears they could be penalized for minor mistakes, get caught up in partisan fights or even leave their jobs.

In Iowa, Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds drew heavy criticism for signing a broad voting bill in March that shortens hours at polling places, narrows the early voting period and imposes new restrictio­ns on mail and absentee ballots. The law also bans sending unsolicite­d absentee ballot applicatio­ns to voters, as some officials did before the 2020 election.

One provision is especially worrisome to Linn County Auditor Joel Miller: a fine of up to $10,000 for a “technical infraction” of election rules. Miller said the penalty could be imposed for unintentio­nal mistakes, such as opening a polling place a few minutes late, and raises concerns about partisan enforcemen­t.

“It’s a lot of moving parts and a lot of variables, and people make mistakes, and now I’m liable for all those mistakes,” he said. “The process could be likewise corrupted by the secretary of state arbitraril­y administer­ing the law in a very uneven manner, depending on whether you’re a Democratic county or a Republican county.”

A bill signed into law Thursday by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, could lead to $25,000 fines for election supervisor­s if a ballot drop box is accessible outside early voting hours or is left unsupervis­ed.

Georgia also has been in the spotlight over restrictio­ns passed by the GOP-dominated Legislatur­e and signed into law by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp in March.

The law includes limits on where ballot drop boxes can be placed and accessed. It also allows the Legislatur­e to select the chair of the state election board, who has the power to intervene in county election offices and install a temporary superinten­dent, as well as hire and fire personnel, including election directors and poll officers.

Fulton County, which includes most of the Democratic stronghold of Atlanta, has been a target of Republican criticism over long voting lines, problems processing absentee ballots and other issues. Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, a Republican, has said the county has been “failing its voters for at least 25 years.”

There have been more than 350 restrictiv­e voting bills filed in 47 states this year, according to the Brennan Center for Justice, a public policy group that advocates for voter access. Many seek to place new rules around mail and early voting, methods used without issue in 2020, with some tacking on new penalties for election administra­tors.

In 2020, election officials in Harris County, Texas, which includes the Democratic stronghold of Houston and is one of the most racially diverse in the nation, went further than anywhere else in the state to create new ways to vote. They opened 24-hour polling places and implemente­d drive-thru voting. They also tried to mail all voters unsolicite­d absentee ballot applicatio­ns but were blocked by the Texas Supreme Court.

The county, where nearly half of the 5 million residents are Hispanic and 20% are Black, saw a record 1.7 million votes last year. Between 10,000 and 15,000 people cast ballots at 24-hour centers during times when polling places are normally closed. More than half of the roughly 127,000 people who voted at drive-thru centers were Black, Hispanic or Asian.

In response, Republican­s in the GOP-controlled Legislatur­e have pushed proposals to ban 24-hour and drive-thru voting centers and to make it a crime to send voters unsolicite­d absentee ballot materials.

“If you got rid of every election administra­tor you don’t like in your state, the desire for drive-thru voting, for mail ballot voting, for expanded hours is still there. We already made it happen,” said Isabel Longoria, the election administra­tor of Harris County. “So you can either get with the times and proudly support these modern initiative­s or you can be the person who stood in the way.”

 ?? (AP/John Bazemore) ?? A voter submits a ballot in an official drop box in October during early voting in Athens, Ga. Use of drop boxes in last year’s presidenti­al election is among measures being targeted by some new laws going forward.
(AP/John Bazemore) A voter submits a ballot in an official drop box in October during early voting in Athens, Ga. Use of drop boxes in last year’s presidenti­al election is among measures being targeted by some new laws going forward.

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