Dayton Daily News

GOP lawmakers seek greater control over local elections

- By Anthony Izaguirre JIM SLOSIAREK / THE GAZETTE VIA AP / FILE

Partisan takeovers of election boards. Threats to fine county election officials and overturn results. Even bans on giving water to voters while they stand in line.

In addition to their nationwide efforts to limit access to the ballot, Republican lawmakers in some states are moving to gain greater control over the local mechanics of elections, from voter registrati­on all the way to certifying results.

The bills, which have already become law in Georgia and Iowa, resurrect elements of former President Donald Trump’s extraordin­ary campaign to subvert his loss, when his backers openly floated the notion of having legislatur­es override the will of the voters and launched legal challenges against measures that made it easier to vote during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“It’s an overreach of power,” said Aunna Dennis,

executive director of the Georgia chapter of the voting advocacy group Common Cause. “They’re definitely trying to do an upheaval of our election system.”

In a step widely interprete­d as a way to check Georgia’s Democratic stronghold­s, Republican Gov. Brian Kemp signed a bill Thursday to give the GOP-dominated Legislatur­e greater influence over a state board that regulates elections and empowers it to remove local election officials.

Other states are moving in similar directions.

In Iowa, after left-leaning counties sent voters absentee ballot applicatio­ns in 2020, a recently signed law would bar election workers from sending the forms out unless requested and threatens to fine officials for violating rules. A South Carolina

proposal would give lawmakers new oversight of the members appointed to the currently independen­t State Election Commission. In Arizona, a Republican proposal that has since died would have allowed the Legislatur­e to overturn election results and appoint its own Electoral College representa­tives.

The Brennan Center for Justice, a public policy group that supports expanded voter access, tallied more than 250 restrictiv­e proposals in the states, many of them intended to roll back voting methods that were expanded because of the pandemic. That includes early and mail voting options.

Republican­s have said the bills are meant to shore up public confidence in elections, though members of the GOP have been the leading voices spreading baseless claims that the 2020 election was fraudulent. There is universal agreement among experts that the election was free of widespread problems.

 ??  ?? Brooklyn Landt (left) and Eric Vos fill in their ballots on Nov. 3, 2020, at a recreation center in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Brooklyn Landt (left) and Eric Vos fill in their ballots on Nov. 3, 2020, at a recreation center in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

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