Los Angeles Times

Georgia faces federal voting lawsuit

Activists seek broad reforms, saying people were deprived of right to vote in midterm.

- By Jenny Jarvie jenny.jarvie@latimes.com Twitter: @jennyjarvi­e

ATLANTA — Voting rights activists working with Democrat Stacey Abrams filed a sweeping federal lawsuit Tuesday against Georgia election officials, alleging they “grossly mismanaged” the recent midterm, depriving Georgia voters — especially those of color — of their “fundamenta­l right to vote.”

The 66-page complaint filed in Atlanta by Fair Fight Action, a nonprofit group set up this month, describes “serious and unconstitu­tional flaws” in Georgia’s election process and calls for large-scale voting reforms, including asking the court to put Georgia election laws under federal court supervisio­n.

Abrams lost her bid for Georgia governor to Republican Brian Kemp this month by about 54,700 votes after an acrimoniou­s race in which she dubbed Kemp an “architect of voter suppressio­n.”

The lawsuit does not list Kemp as a defendant since he resigned from his role as Georgia’s secretary of state two days after the election. Instead, it targets Robyn A. Crittenden, who is the state’s interim secretary of state, as well as other members of the state election board. Kemp is, however, named repeatedly in the lawsuit.

“The general election for governor is over, but the citizens and voters of Georgia deserve an election system that they can have confidence in,” Lauren GrohWargo, Abrams’ campaign manager and chief executive of Fair Fight Action, said at a news conference Tuesday outside a federal courthouse in downtown Atlanta.

While Abrams is on the board of Fair Fight Action, which filed the suit along with Georgia Care in Action, she is not listed as a plaintiff in the lawsuit.

The Nov. 6 election drew historic voter registrati­on and turnout in Georgia, with more than 3.9 million people casting votes. But according to the lawsuit, “decadeslon­g neglect of the elections infrastruc­ture left a system virtually guaranteed to fail.”

“Time-tested voter suppressio­n tactics further burdened the right to vote,” the lawsuit states. “Voters faced a systematic disregard for establishe­d rules; a refusal to provide resources adequate to enable a fair voting process; and policies and practices that stifled the votes of the people.”

A flurry of lawsuits were filed by Abrams’ campaign and her allies before and after the election, challengin­g specific provisions of Georgia voting policy, such as the “exact match” policy that strikes Georgia voters from the rolls if the name on their registrati­on applicatio­n does not exactly match their name on their government­issued IDs, and the “use it or lose it” policy that removes voters if they have not recently exercised their right to vote.

Richard L. Hasen, professor of law and political science at UC Irvine, said the new lawsuit had an unusually broad focus.

“The strategy is to show that the cumulative effect is severe, even if any one of these things in isolation might seem to be less serious,” Hasen said. “The argument is that all of these things work together to deprive people of the right to vote. I think it’s a bolder kind of strategy. And they ask for bold relief.”

The complaint asks the court to declare that Georgia’s current elections process violates multiple federal laws, including the fundamenta­l right to vote under the 1st and 14th amendments, the ban on racial discrimina­tion in voting under the 15th Amendment, and the right to equal protection under the 14th Amendment.

Filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, it asks the court to permanentl­y order election officials to block “exact match” and “use it or lose it” policies, replace “insecure and unreliable” voting machines with paper ballots counted by optical scanners, train local officials and adopt and enforce “uniform standards.”

Notably, it also asks the court to require that Georgia get approval from a federal court before it enacts any changes to its voting laws.

The federal Voting Rights Act of 1965 required states with a documented history of voter discrimina­tion, mostly in the Deep South, to “pre-clear” any changes in their voting laws with the Justice Department or a federal court. However, in 2013, the Supreme Court ruled in Shelby County vs. Holder that the formula used to determine which states must seek federal “pre-clearance” was outdated and that Southern states had been unfairly singled out.

Whether the plaintiffs ultimately prevail, Hasen said, depends on what the evidence shows. Even if the plaintiffs can prove intentiona­l discrimina­tion, a court won’t necessaril­y impose pre-clearance.

In 2016, the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals struck down a stringent 2013 North Carolina voting law, finding that it targeted African Americans with “almost surgical precision.” Yet the court declined to impose pre-clearance.

According to GrohWargo, more than 40,000 voters contacted Abrams’ campaign hotline to register complaints about voting in the midterm election.

Some waited for hours at the polls or arrived at polling stations that had run out of paper ballots or had malfunctio­ning voting machines. Others did not receive ballots or had their voter registrati­on applicatio­n rejected.

“It was a complete breakdown,” Angel Poventud, a resident of southwest Atlanta who spent election day assisting voters at the Pittman Park Recreation Center polling station, said this month. The station began the day with only three operationa­l voting machines, forcing voters to wait in line for up to four hours.

“There weren’t enough cards, there weren’t enough staff, there weren’t enough machines,” Poventud said. “People left and the majority never came back. So many votes were lost.”

Kemp, who took office as Georgia’s secretary of state in 2010, had since purged 1.4 million inactive registered voters from the rolls. While federal law requires the state to update voter rolls by removing those who have died or moved, Kemp’s critics accuse him of unfairly removing many eligible voters, especially minority and lowincome Georgians.

Kemp has pushed back against the criticisms, noting that he has introduced online voter registrati­on in Georgia and the state has about 1 million more registered voters today than it had in 2010.

On Tuesday, Kemp’s spokesman declined to comment on the lawsuit.

“This week, Governorel­ect Brian Kemp is meeting with public safety and economic developmen­t leaders,” Ryan Mahoney said in an email. “He is focused on building a safe and prosperous future for Georgia families.”

Candice Broce, press secretary for the secretary of state, said, “With a record high of 7,000,000 people on Georgia’s voter rolls and unpreceden­ted voter turnout in November’s midterm election, it has never been easier to register to vote or make your voice heard at the ballot box in our state.”

 ?? Alyssa Pointer Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on ?? STACEY ABRAMS’ supporters repeatedly mentioned Gov.-elect Brian Kemp in the lawsuit. They say voter suppressio­n especially harmed people of color.
Alyssa Pointer Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on STACEY ABRAMS’ supporters repeatedly mentioned Gov.-elect Brian Kemp in the lawsuit. They say voter suppressio­n especially harmed people of color.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States