Lodi News-Sentinel

Georgia asks for dismissal of DOJ suit over new voting law

- Mark Niesse

Georgia asked a judge Wednesday to throw out a federal lawsuit against the state’s new voting law, saying the case by the U.S. Department of Justice is based on “political posturing rather than a serious legal challenge.”

The motion to dismiss by Republican Attorney General Chris Carr said Georgia’s voting laws are nondiscrim­inatory and ensure greater voter access than several Democratic-run states.

“DOJ fills its complaint with innuendo and hyperbole. But such rhetoric does not make up for the lack of any factual allegation­s demonstrat­ing that the General Assembly acted with a discrimina­tory purpose when it passed SB 202 3 during this year’s legislativ­e session, according to the motion.

The filing is the state’s response to the Biden administra­tion’s first major voting rights case, which alleged that Georgia legislator­s targeted Black voters, especially by limiting absentee voting, which they used more often than white voters.

Georgia’s voting law curtails ballot drop boxes, imposes stricter ID requiremen­ts, shortens absentee ballot request deadlines, prohibits handing out food and water to voters in line, and gives the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e the power to seek the replacemen­t of county election boards.

The Department of Justice contends that Georgia’s voting law violated the Voting Rights Act, the landmark civil rights law protecting racial minorities from discrimina­tion.

Carr’s filing argued that the federal government didn’t take aim at several Democratic states with less voting access, including Delaware, Maryland, New York, Rhode Island and Wisconsin.

The motion cites the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent ruling in an Arizona case that upheld its voting laws despite a challenge alleging they had a disproport­ionate impact on minority voters.

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