Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia governor says law blocks election interferen­ce

Governor was responding to Trump demand

- BY GREG BLUESTEIN

ATLANTA — Gov. Brian Kemp’s office responded Monday to President Donald Trump’s call to help him overturn Georgia’s election results with a reminder that state law “prohibits the governor from interferin­g in the election.”

The Georgia Republican has become a favorite target of Trump, who said Sunday he was “ashamed” that he endorsed him in 2018 and tweeted Monday that the “hapless” governor should use “emergency powers.”

“Georgia law prohibits the governor from interferin­g in elections. The secretary of state, who is an elected constituti­onal off icer, has oversight over elections that cannot be overridden by executive order,” said Kemp spokesman Cody Hall.

“As the governor has said repeatedly, he will continue to follow the law and encourage the secretary of state to take reasonable steps — including a sample audit of signatures — to restore trust and address serious issues that have been raised.”

The governor has been largely silent for weeks over Trump’s attacks, which have escalated after he became the first Republican to lose Georgia in a

presidenti­al vote in nearly 30 years. He said in a previous interview that he understand­s Trump’s “frustratio­n” but that the law clearly sets out his duties.

The criticism could haunt Kemp through the 2022 midterms, when he is gearing up to face Stacey Abrams in a likely rematch. It appears increasing­ly possible that he might first have to survive a primary challenge from a Trump- backed adversary — perhaps Doug Collins, a four-term congressma­n now leading the president’s Georgia recount effort.

Kemp has had little backup from other GOP officials. Just as Republican elected officials have largely stood by as Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger is attacked by the president, Kemp’s staunchest supporters have stayed silent, wary of antagonizi­ng Trump and his allies ahead of Jan. 5 runoffs for control of the U.S. Senate.

U. S. Sens. Ke l ly Loeffler and David Perdue didn’t come to his defense. Neither did other top Republican officials. Among the few who spoke up were former Republican legislator­s, including Buzz Brockway and Allen Peake.

“This is absolutely ridiculous. Brian Kemp has done an incredible job leading our state during the worst pandemic of our lifetime,” said Peake, a Macon Republican who didn’t stand for another term in 2018.

“I for one am tired of Trump’s whining. Man up, admit you got beat, and do what’s right for our country. I’ll be backing Kemp in 2022.”

Trump’s tweet on Monday called on Kemp to use “his emergency powers, which can be easily done, to overrule his obstinate Secretary of State and do a match of signatures on envelopes.”

Signatures on absentee ballot envelopes were verified by county elections officials when they were received at county election offices. But it’s impossible to “match” signatures to ballots, since they were separated from envelopes to protect the secret ballot, leaving no way to link voters to the candidates they chose.

Constituti­onal law professor Anthony Kreis added that there are no such emergency powers conferred on Kemp by the state constituti­on or Georgia law.

“Raffensper­ger is not only an independen­t state constituti­onal executive officer, he’s the designated chief elections officer by law,” he said. “Both have discharged their duties under the OCGA.”

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Brian Kemp

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