Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tennessee judge denies request seeking absentee ballot info

- BY KIMBERLEE KRUESI

NASHVILLE — Democratic officials improperly filed a public records request while seeking last-minute informatio­n on voters who have requested an absentee ballot but haven’t returned them yet, a Tennessee judge ruled Monday.

Tennessee’s Democratic Party and the campaign of Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Marquita Bradshaw had filed a lawsuit over the weekend accusing state election officials of refusing to release the ballot informatio­n as required by state law.

However, Chancellor Patricia Head Moskal in her 8- page ruling found there was not enough evidence that Democratic officials sent a proper public records requests to the state’s elections office — where Secretary of State Tre Hargett, a Republican, and elections coordinato­r Mark Goins were named as defendants.

Furthermor­e, Moskal ruled that the state likely didn’t have the informatio­n the Democrats sought.

“There is nothing in the record to demonstrat­e that the specific voter informatio­n requested — regarding absentee voters’ requests for ballots who have not yet submitted their ballots — is compiled by county election commission­s and transmitte­d to the (state’s) Division of Elections,” the judge wrote.

According to lawsuit, the Democrats had alleged that the Secretary of State’s office instructed all 95 county election offices withhold informatio­n about voters who have not returned absentee ballots by the end of early voting — which ended last week.

During a Monday hearing, Bradshaw’s campaign conceded they hadn’t requested informatio­n from all 95 counties. Instead, they reached out to just five counties: Shelby, Davidson, Knox, Madison and Washington. Knox County was the only one to hand over informatio­n.

“As the record showed today in court the lawsuit was based on falsehoods,” said Julia Bruck, a spokespers­on for the Secretary of State’s office, in a statement. “We did not receive a public records request for the informatio­n. We did not deny a public records request. We did not tell counties to deny a public records request.”

Bradshaw faces Republican Bill Hagerty in Tuesday’s election for the seat left open by retiring Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander.

Ken Taylor, Bradshaw’s campaign manager, said he was encouraged by the judge’s ruling that such informatio­n was indeed public and added that they planned on resending proper public records requests to the local counties.

“We’re essentiall­y seeking that informatio­n again,” Taylor said. “Now that we have the ruling, we can say that we are entitled to that informatio­n.”

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