Dayton Daily News

Ga. elections chief seeks to end no-excuse absentee voting

- ByMarkNies­se

Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger onWednesda­y asked Georgia state representa­tives to end no-excuse absentee voting, a proposal that would limit the voting method used by over 1.3 million people in the presidenti­al election.

Raffensper­ger wants to reduce absentee voting after promoting it during the coronaviru­s pandemic, when he mailed ballot applicatio­ns to registered voters before the primary election.

In last month’s election, about a quarter of Georgia’s 5 million voters ballots cast cast absentee ballots as Democrat Joe Biden defeated President Donald Trump.

“It makes no sense when we have three weeks of in-person early voting available. It opens the door to potential illegal voting,” Raffensper­ger told theHouse Government­al Affairs Committee.

“From a logistical challenge, it’s a tremendous burdenonou­r counties” that run elections.

Absentee voting became politicize­d after Trump frequently suggested it wasn’t trustworth­y, causingRep­ublicans to move toward voting early or on Election Day. About 34% of Biden voters submitted absentee ballots compared to 18% of Trump voters.

Georgia law has allowed anyone to cast an absentee ballot without having to give a reason since 2005.

Before this year, absentee voting was more often preferred by Republican and older voters, accounting for about 5% of ballots cast in prior elections. Absentee voting gained popularity as more people sought to avoid human contact and the risk of illness.

Democrats say they’ll oppose cutbacks on absentee voting because it will forcemore voters towait in long lines at crowded polling places following precinct closures across the state in recent years.

“This will disenfranc­hise a lot of voters because they wouldn’t want to come out and stand in line,” said state Rep. Rhonda Burnough, a Democrat from Riverdale. ”If you don’t want to have a no-excuse based system for absentee voting, what are we going to do about all the lines and the perception that Georgia doesn’t know how to run an election?”

Raffensper­ger’s proposal will be considered by the Republican-controlled Georgia General Assemblywh­en it convenes in January. The Senate Republican Caucus announced earlier this month it also wants to end no-excuse absentee voting.

A handful of states currently restrict absentee voting to people who provide a valid excuse, such as old age, disability, sickness or travel. But the majority of states allow anyone to use an absentee or mail-in ballot for any reason.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States