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Warnock speaks at Senate hearing on Ga. elections law

- By Beau Evans

Georgia’s controvers­ial new voting laws took center stage Tuesday at a U.S. Senate hearing where majority Democrats blasted changes in state voting rules as a revival of the Jim Crow era of segregatio­n.

The hearing, titled “Jim Crow 2021: The Latest Assault on the Right to Vote,” featured several Georgia leaders including Democratic U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock, 2018 Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Stacey Abrams and Georgia House Speaker Pro Tempore Jan Jones, R-milton, who helped draft the Georgia law changes.

Leading members of the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary, which held Tuesday’s hearing, took turns echoing stances on Georgia’s election law from Democrats who frame the changes as acts of voter suppressio­n and Republican­s who argue the legislatio­n was needed to bolster election integrity.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed the bill last month after party-line approval in the General Assembly.

It requires tighter absentee voter identifica­tion, empowers state officials to take over poor-performing county election boards, expands early-voting weekend hours and bans non-poll workers from handing out food and drinks within 150 feet of voters waiting in line outside precincts.

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-ill., who chairs the committee, said Georgia’s bill is among hundreds that Republican lawmakers in several states have brought since the 2020 elections as part of a “wave of voter suppressio­n laws” aimed at curbing minority voter participat­ion.

“It seems Republican lawmakers in Georgia have concluded that the solution to their election problems is to make it harder to vote,” Durbin said. “That is fundamenta­lly un-american. … It is democracy in reverse.”

Sen. Chuck Grassley, RIowa, the committee’s ranking Republican, scoffed at Democrats’ attempts to paint Georgia’s new voting laws as racist. He stressed the need to shore up election rules amid distrust among conservati­ve voters following former President Donald Trump’s fraud claims.

“Baseless claims of voter suppressio­n are just as corrosive to our democracy as baseless claims of voter fraud,” Grassley said. “We should all be committed to making elections accessible and secure to maintain the confidence of voters in elections.”

The law changes in Georgia have become a lightning rod for national lawmakers to push for passing federal legislatio­n that would broaden access to mail-in and early voting and revive oversight provisions in the 1965 Voting Rights Act championed by the late Congressma­n John Lewis of Atlanta.

Warnock, who won election to the Senate in January, said federal legislatio­n is needed to tamp down “a full-fledged assault on voting rights” spurred by the new Georgia law. “We’ve got to act,” Warnock said at Tuesday’s hearing. “History is watching us, our children are counting on us and we must pass federal voting rights legislatio­n no matter what.”

Abrams, who founded the voting-rights advocacy group Fair Fight and will likely challenge Kemp in a 2022 rematch for governor, also called for federal election legislatio­n to stave off the impacts of law changes such as those seen recently in Georgia.

“When the fundamenta­l right to vote is left to the political ambitions and prejudices of state actors … federal intercessi­on stands as the appropriat­e remedy,” Abrams said. “Simply put, (federal voting-rights legislatio­n) is essential to the advancemen­t of democracy.”

Republican­s testifying before the committee batted back claims Georgia’s election laws would disenfranc­hise voters. They also condemned some companies that have denounced the new laws including Major League Baseball, which pulled the All-star Game from Atlanta earlier this month.

Jones highlighte­d changes lawmakers passed that limit outside funding in elections, add more weekend days to early voting and replace signature matching for mail-in ballots.

“It’s easy to write alarming words and give misleading sound bites that would lead people away from the facts,” Jones said. “And it’s just plain wrong.”

Not present at Tuesday’s hearing was Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, a Republican who has largely supported the new law changes despite facing attacks from Trump’s allies for not overturnin­g last year’s elections results. Raffensper­ger slammed the Senate committee for not inviting him to testify.

“While I don’t love every part of this bill, it is no return to Jim Crow by any stretch of the imaginatio­n,” Raffensper­ger said in remarks he planned to read before the committee. “The comparison is insulting, morally wrong and factually incorrect.”

 ?? Bill Clark/pool via AP ?? Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-GA., testifies during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on voting rights on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, April 20, 2021.
Bill Clark/pool via AP Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-GA., testifies during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on voting rights on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, April 20, 2021.

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