Calhoun Times

Georgia Democrats sue to curb long lines on Election Day

- By Beau Evans

Capitol Beat News Service

The Democratic Party of Georgia filed a lawsuit Thursday to force Georgia election officials to take steps to cut down long lines at voting precincts ahead of the Nov. 3 general election.

The lawsuit comes after several Georgia counties saw long lines at polling places during the primary elections in June and distancing measures mandated to curb health risks from coronaviru­s continue posing challenges for voter access.

Filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, the lawsuit seeks a court order requiring more polling places, better equipment training, extra time to set up precincts, backup voting machines and clearer instructio­ns on when to switch to emergency paper ballots.

The lawsuit lays blame on county and state election officials for the long lines, arguing poll closures and consolidat­ions, equipment issues, lack of training for poll workers and little emergency technical assistance have worsened lines on Election Day.

Hours-long waits in line to cast ballots have the potential to pose not just an inconvenie­nce but a source of disenfranc­hisement for Georgia voters, making it a legal matter that should be addressed in court, the lawsuit argues.

“Defendants’ systemic failures in election administra­tion have led to long lines that have resulted in significan­t disenfranc­hisement of Georgia voters for over a decade now as voters who are forced to wait in line leave and many others never enter the line at all, deterred by the impending wait,” the lawsuit says.

Several Georgia voters joined the lawsuit along with the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.

The lawsuit especially singles out Fulton County, which saw huge lines during the primary election in early June, and Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, whose office has placed blame squarely on Fulton and a handful of other county election officials for local precinct problems.

Those problems are poised to be potentiall­y worse for the Nov. 3 general election, when millions of voters are expected to head to polls during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the lawsuit argues. Long lines would pose health risks for elderly Georgians and those with chronic illnesses.

Responding to the lawsuit, Raffensper­ger’s office noted many duties like adding polling places and voting equipment fall to counties to implement but that the state had provided local officials with data to help make improvemen­ts to reduce long lines for the November election.

“We will work around the clock from here through the elections – under the extraordin­ary circumstan­ces of a pandemic – to ensure that all eligible Georgia voters are informed fully about any polling place changes, that we have enough precincts and poll workers and that we do everything possible to minimize lines,” Deputy Secretary of State Jordan Fuchs said in a prepared statement.

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