Boston Herald

Georgia election flap highlights partisan rancor

- By Jonah goldbErg Jonah Goldberg is editor-in-chief of The Dispatch.

The Georgia debacle is a perfect example of the rolling collective action problem of our democracy. A collective action problem, simply put, is when there is a goal that would benefit everyone — in this case, confidence in our machinery of democracy — but the incentive structure for the individual players makes it impossible to cooperate to reach the goal.

The Georgia electoral mess goes back to the 2018 Georgia governor’s race — and every faction in that state has made it worse over the last three years.

Former state Rep. Stacey Abrams ran for governor against then-Secretary of State Brian Kemp, who oversaw the legal but aggressive updating — critics say “purging” — of the voter rolls. Abrams claimed this was a racist attempt to disenfranc­hise Black voters.

When Abrams lost, she refused to formally concede, claiming Kemp had won the election because of “voter suppressio­n.” The charge is almost surely false. It was a huge turnout year, including among Black voters. But her claim became gospel among Democrats and liberal pundits.

In 2020, Georgia — run by Republican­s — carried out

COVID-safe electoral measures, including easier absentee and early voting. In the lead-up to the election, former President Donald Trump repeatedly let it be known that if he lost, he would blame such measures as evidence of widespread “fraud.”

He was true to his word. He convinced large numbers of Republican­s and right-wing media commentato­rs that the election was stolen. This has come to be known as “the big lie.”

With the pandemic fading, Georgia Republican­s moved to update their election laws. And because so many Republican officials needed to get right with their voters who still believe the big lie, the Legislatur­e toyed with some bad ideas — like actually getting rid of no-excuse absentee voting entirely — that never made it into the bill.

However, it did pass a troubling measure that allows the appointed and Republican-controlled State Election Board to overrule local election officials when it deems it necessary.

Overall, though, the state’s Election Integrity Act of 2021 is far more modest than its detractors claim. Its rules on absentee and early voting are more generous than many Democrat-controlled states, including President Biden’s home state of Delaware. The new law is hardly immune to criticism, but it’s certainly not “Jim Crow in the 21st century,” as Biden called it.

But none of this matters. First, both political parties seem to have forgotten that there was a pandemic requiring reasonable changes from the norm.

The Trumpists want to pretend none of that was really necessary — or even the point. They claim it was all done to steal the election. Democrats want to pretend that those extraordin­ary pandemic measures were ordinary and any attempt to roll them back even a little amounts to a Republican effort to steal future elections.

The 2020 election was hugely successful by any convention­al metric. There was precious little fraud, and more people voted than ever before. But Democrats can’t let go of the idea that their voters, especially their Black voters, are being suppressed, and Republican­s can’t let go of the idea that the election was stolen. And when either side acts on these assumption­s, legislativ­ely or simply rhetorical­ly, it confirms the darkest suspicions of the other side and undermines faith in the machinery of democracy even more.

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