Georgia voting law denounced
GOP restrictions are just ‘Jim Crow in the 21st century,’ he says.
President Biden calls the new restrictions from Republicans “Jim Crow in the 21st century.”
WASHINGTON — President Biden on Friday denounced a new Georgia law that would make it harder to vote — one of many Republican efforts across the country to restrict access to the ballot box.
“Instead of celebrating the rights of all Georgians to vote or winning campaigns on the merits of their ideas, Republicans in the state instead rushed through an un-American law to deny people the right to vote,” he said in a statement. “This law, like so many others being pursued by Republicans in statehouses across the country, is a blatant attack on the Constitution and good conscience.”
He urged Congress to pass Democratic legislation to protect voting rights and pledged to “take [his] case to the American people.”
“This is Jim Crow in the 21st century,” he said. “It must end.”
The Georgia law, signed Thursday by GOP Gov. Brian Kemp, limits voting in a number of ways, including requiring absentee voters to submit documentation to prove their identity, restricting the use of drop boxes for early voting, and giving the Republican-dominated state Legislature control over administering elections at the local level.
The law also makes it a crime to distribute food or water to voters waiting in line to cast ballots.
The White House also criticized the arrest of Democratic state Rep. Park Cannon for knocking on the door of the room where Kemp was signing the bill before half a dozen white male Republicans. State troopers handcuffed Park, who is Black, and led her away. She was charged with two misdemeanors — obstructing law enforcement and disruption — and was released that evening.
“Anyone who saw that video would have been deeply concerned by the actions that were taken by law enforcement,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said.
Biden has pledged to get involved in state-level battles over voting rights. He met with Stacey Abrams, the Democratic activist and former Georgia lawmaker, during his trip to Atlanta last week, and on Thursday he blasted Republican voting proposals at his first news conference since taking office.
The president used nearly identical language later Friday during a virtual fundraiser for Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms: “It’s sick and un-American, what they’re doing, and it cannot stand.”
Many of the Republican proposals are rooted in baseless claims that the 2020 election was marred by fraud, a lie pushed by former President Trump to explain his loss to Biden.
Biden won in Georgia, becoming the first Democratic presidential candidate to do so since 1992, and two months later Democrats ousted the state’s two Republican incumbents in the U.S. Senate.
“There’s no doubt there were many alarming issues with how the [November] election was handled, and those problems, understandably, led to the crisis of confidence in the ballot box here in Georgia,” Kemp said Thursday, contradicting the state’s GOP election officials, who have repeatedly said the election was secure.
Trump praised the Georgia law in a statement Friday that included falsehoods about last year’s voting and reflected lingering bitterness over his defeat.
“They learned from the travesty of the 2020 Presidential Election, which can never be allowed to happen again,” he said. “Too bad these changes could not have been done sooner!”
Three voting rights groups, represented by Democratic Party lawyer Marc Elias, have already filed a lawsuit alleging that Georgia’s new law will have a disproportionate effect on voters of color and that its provisions “lack any justification for their burdensome and discriminatory effects on voting.”
Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel said her party was prepared to defend the law in court, and she accused Democrats of misconstruing its effects.
“Democrats can lie and spin about the bill all they want,” she said in a statement. “But the real question should be: why are Democrats so terrified of a transparent and secure election process?”