Rome News-Tribune

Emergency court ruling clears path for voter purge

♦ Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger plans to purge 309,000 voters listed inactive from the state’s rolls.

- By Dave Williams Capitol Beat News Service

A federal judge is letting Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger move forward with a plan to purge 309,000 voters listed inactive from the state’s rolls.

But an emergency ruling U.S. District Judge Steve Jones issued on Monday leaves the door open for restoring at least some of those Georgians’ voting rights following a

ATLANTA —

court hearing set for Thursday.

Fair Fight Action, a voting rights organizati­on launched by 2018 Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Stacey Abrams following her narrow loss to Republican Brian Kemp filed a lawsuit to block the state’s “use-it-orlose it” legal stance on purging the voter rolls.

“Georgians should not lose their right to vote simply because they have not expressed that right in recent elections,” said Lauren Groh-wargo, CEO of Fair Fight Action. “Georgia’s practice of removing voters who have declined to participat­e in recent elections violates the United States Constituti­on.”

The case involves 120,000 Georgians who haven’t voted since 2012 and have not responded to letters from the secretary of state’s office and 189,000 others who have moved away from addresses the state has on file.

Georgia Democrats have long complained about voter purges instigated by Republican secretarie­s of state. More than 500,000 voters were taken off the rolls during the summer of 2017 in the largest voter purge in U.S. history.

“Proper list maintenanc­e is not only required by longstandi­ng laws but is also important to maintainin­g the integrity and smooth functionin­g of elections,” Raffensper­ger said following Jones’ ruling. “Georgia has registered nearly a half-million voters since the last election, clear proof that we are doing things to make it easy for people to vote.”

Fair Fight Action also charges Raffensper­ger with violating an elections law Republican legislativ­e leaders pushed through the General Assembly last March, which lengthens the time voters can go without casting a ballot before being removed from the rolls from three years to five. The comprehens­ive measure also provides for the state’s switch to new touch-screen voting machines equipped with a paper backup.

While Fair Fight Action argued the new law should be applied retroactiv­ely to inactive voters, a lawyer for the secretary of state’s office said that was not the state’s intention.

 ??  ?? Brad Raffensper­ger
Brad Raffensper­ger

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