Daily Southtown

GOP’s eyes on Ga. county election

Sweeping new law would justify a takeover by state

- By Kate Brumback

ATLANTA — Elections in Georgia’s heavily Democratic Fulton County on Tuesday could decide more than Atlanta’s next mayor and other local races: Republican­s are watching for any mistakes that could justify a state takeover using a sweeping new law.

Struggles to deliver a smooth voting process during the early months of the coronaviru­s pandemic trained a national spotlight on the state’s most populous county. That only intensifie­d as former President Donald Trump and his allies pushed false claims that widespread fraud robbed him of victory last year.

Against that backdrop, GOP state lawmakers empowered the Republican-controlled State Election Board to remove local election officials. Democrats said the provision was written with Fulton in mind, and Republican­s soon launched a state review that could result in the replacemen­t of the Democrat-controlled county election board with the state board’s appointee.

The Atlanta mayor’s race Tuesday is the most high-profile municipal election in Fulton County. It’s a wide-open contest with 14 candidates, so a runoff is likely. Any missteps could be pounced on as evidence the county isn’t competent to run its own elections.

“We know that there’s a target on our backs,” county Board of Commission­ers Chairman Robb Pitts said. “They’re trying to use Fulton County and our voters to score political points ... but I’m just not going to let that happen.”

Amid a flood of criticism, the county election board voted in February to fire elections director Rick

Barron, only to have its decision rejected by the Board of Commission­ers.

The drumbeat of negativity has been tough on county staffers. Barron dismisses much of it as politicall­y motivated, noting that at a statewide convention of county election officials, Fulton received a regional award for overcoming obstacles during the 2020 election cycle.

“Our peers nominated us for that and we got a thundering standing ovation,” he said.

Republican lawmakers in July requested a performanc­e review “to assure voter confidence in our elections and help to rectify elections process deficienci­es.” The State Election Board, as required by the new law, responded in August by

appointing a three-person panel to review Fulton’s election operations.

Some observers believe the problems with the county’s election administra­tion have been overblown.

“If you look hard enough in a county that is as large and as populated as Fulton, you’re going to find problems,” said Daniel Franklin, associate professor emeritus of political science at Georgia State University. “But I’ll bet you’d find problems elsewhere, too.”

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, a longtime critic of Fulton County, seized on the case of two elections workers who were fired this month after colleagues reported seeing them shredding voter registrati­on applicatio­ns.

“New allegation­s have

come to light that Fulton County was seen shredding 300 applicatio­ns related to Georgia’s municipal elections,” Raffensper­ger said in a news release calling for a Justice Department investigat­ion.

Fulton officials chafed at that characteri­zation.

“We weren’t seen to have done it,” Barron said, adding that Fulton officials immediatel­y contacted both the secretary of state’s office and the district attorney’s office. “Two of our employees did something and we then reported it to them because we’re interested in being transparen­t and making sure that the situation was investigat­ed.”

Franklin said Raffensper­ger’s focus on Fulton County makes political sense: After rejecting

Trump’s calls to “find” enough votes to overturn his loss in Georgia, Raffensper­ger now faces GOP primary challenger­s, including one endorsed by the former president.

“The secretary of state’s in a very tough reelection campaign and this is red meat for him,” Franklin said.

But the county does have a history of problems with its elections. Fulton agreed in 2015 to pay a $150,000 penalty and improve poll worker training after state investigat­ors found multiple violations of election law in 2008 and 2012.

During the June 2020 primary election, some voters never received requested absentee ballots. Many waited hours to vote after experience­d poll workers quit and polling sites were consolidat­ed because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The county made changes before the general election and was observed by an independen­t monitor from October through January’s U.S. Senate runoffs. The monitor, Carter Jones, reported to the State Elections Board that he saw “sloppy processes” and “systemic disorganiz­ation” but did not witness “any illegality, fraud or intentiona­l malfeasanc­e.”

The elections warehouse was chaotic the night before the general election, while scanners jammed and other equipment went down on election day. Jones also had some concerns involving the way ballots were transferre­d and stored, according to notes he kept.

Barron said his department has acted on Jones’ recommenda­tions, making staffing changes, creating a separate absentee ballot division and updating standard operating procedures.

With the ongoing state review looming, he worries that some of the new law’s provisions could complicate things during Tuesday’s closely watched election.

The law requires counties to report by 10 p.m. on election night the number of ballots cast by mail, early in person and on election day. That’s a tight deadline when polls close at 7 p.m., even tighter with Atlanta keeping polls open until 8 p.m. in its municipal election, Barron said.

Confusion about the new law may affect voters who show up at the wrong precinct, who traditiona­lly cast a significan­t proportion of Fulton’s provisiona­l ballots, Barron said. This election will be the first in which provisiona­l ballots cast by out-of-precinct voters won’t count unless it’s after 5 p.m. and the voter signs a statement saying it would be impossible to get to his or her own precinct by the close of polls.

 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE/AP ?? Steven Posey checks his phone as he waits in line to vote in Atlanta in 2020. Georgia’s most populous county, a Democratic stronghold that includes most of Atlanta, faces a high-stakes test in Tuesday’s municipal elections.
JOHN BAZEMORE/AP Steven Posey checks his phone as he waits in line to vote in Atlanta in 2020. Georgia’s most populous county, a Democratic stronghold that includes most of Atlanta, faces a high-stakes test in Tuesday’s municipal elections.

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