Chattanooga Times Free Press

GOP targets ballot drop boxes in Georgia, Florida

- BY CHRISTINA A. CASSIDY

ATLANTA — Atlantaare­a voters looking to return their ballots using a drop box in next year’s gubernator­ial election will have to do some searching.

Just eight boxes will be spread across Fulton County’s nearly 529 square miles — or about one for every 100,000 registered voters. That’s down from the 38 drop boxes available to voters last fall. It’s the result of a broad new law pushed by Georgia Republican­s in response to former President Donald Trump’s false claims of a stolen election.

Georgia is one of several states controlled politicall­y by Republican­s that are seeking additional restrictio­ns on voting, citing security concerns. A favorite target is ballot drop boxes, which have been used for years in states with expansive mail voting and which millions of voters used last year as a way to avoid polling places during the pandemic.

Democrats say the boxes are more secure than regular mailboxes, and their use was largely trouble-free last fall. Even Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican who signed the restrictiv­e bill into law, posted a video on his Twitter account that showed him using a drop box to cast his ballot last year, flashing a thumbs up sign afterward.

“They loved ballot drop boxes until Trump and the Republican­s started losing,” said state Rep. Erica Thomas, a Democrat from metro Atlanta.

For election officials and voters across the country, drop boxes seemed like an ideal solution to two major problems in 2020: a coronaviru­s pandemic that raised fears about crowded polling places and reports of mail delays that threatened on-time delivery of ballots.

The boxes were targeted a few times by vandals, but few other problems were reported across the country. Even so, Republican­s say they want to ensure the boxes will be a secure way to cast a ballot.

“It’s a continued narrative where you try to

pit security against accessibil­ity, and you have to choose one or the other,” said Hillary Hall, a former county elections clerk in Colorado who now works with election officials across the country through the National Vote at Home Institute. “It’s a false choice.”

Drop boxes have been used for years in states such as Colorado, Oregon and Washington, where ballots are mailed to all registered voters ahead of every election.

Placement can vary widely. In some places, they’re located inside public buildings, available only during office hours. Elsewhere, they are outside and accessible at any hour, typically with video surveillan­ce or someone monitoring in-person.

“I’m just so glad we had that option,” said Cynthia Vaughn, a retired financial manager from Atlanta who used a drop box at her local library in November and again for the state’s January Senate runoff.

She said slashing access to them will be especially hard on those who don’t have ready access to a vehicle or public transit: “Driving extra miles to get somewhere to drop off a ballot doesn’t adhere to the whole point that it should be easy and accommodat­ing for everyone to vote.”

They were so popular in Florida last year that nearly 1.5 million voters used them, according to Florida Supervisor­s of Elections, a statewide group of local election officials. Even so, a bill pending in the Florida Senate would limit their use to hours when in-person early voting is offered. An earlier version would have eliminated them entirely, but that was revised after election supervisor­s opposed it.

The bill’s sponsor, Republican Sen. Dennis Baxley, acknowledg­ed during a legislativ­e hearing that he was not aware of any problems with drop boxes in Florida last year. Neverthele­ss, he said they introduced security gaps into the state’s mail voting process that must be closed.

“I don’t think we should sit on our laurels or congratula­te ourselves on a successful election,” Baxley said. “Our time is better spent learning lessons from problems in other states to make sure we are prepared for 2022 and beyond.”

No state reported any significan­t problems with drop boxes last year.

Democrats complained the bill would preclude voters from dropping off ballots in the days just before an election, when early voting is no longer available and voters are worried about relying on the U.S. Postal Service to deliver their ballots on time.

Republican lawmakers in other states, including Michigan and Wisconsin, also have proposed new limits, though the chances of many of them becoming law are slim because Democrats control the governor’s offices.

As part of a broad GOP-led election overhaul in Iowa this year, lawmakers approved legislatio­n to limit drop boxes in future elections to just one per county. Previously, state law did not say how many drop boxes counties could operate. Lawmakers in Texas, where the GOP is in full control, also are debating how voters can return ballots.

Election experts say outdoor drop boxes are arguably more secure than a regular U.S. Postal Service mailbox sitting on a sidewalk, especially when video surveillan­ce is used. They are typically large, heavy and anchored to the ground.

 ?? AP PHOTO/LYNNE SLADKY ?? An election worker stamps a vote-by-mail ballot dropped off by a voter before placing it in an official ballot drop box before at the Miami-Dade County Board of Elections on Oct. 26 in Doral, Fla.
AP PHOTO/LYNNE SLADKY An election worker stamps a vote-by-mail ballot dropped off by a voter before placing it in an official ballot drop box before at the Miami-Dade County Board of Elections on Oct. 26 in Doral, Fla.

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