Texarkana Gazette

Primary chaos puts Georgia in race to fix voting by November

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ATLANTA — Coronaviru­s infections sidelined some poll workers and scared away others. New workers were trained online instead of in person. And when Election Day arrived, trouble with new voting equipment and social-distancing precaution­s forced voters to wait in long lines, sometimes for hours.

The resulting chaos during Tuesday’s primary elections in Georgia resulted in a national embarrassm­ent and for the second time since 2018 raised questions about the state’s ability to conduct fair elections. It also set off a scramble to identify and fix problems before the highstakes November general election.

“It scares me,” said Cathy Cox, a Democrat who oversaw Georgia elections as secretary of state from 1999 through 2007. “But hopefully it was such a traumatic experience for so many people, and appears to be such a black eye for Georgia, that it will ring the bell for elected officials to make significan­t changes.”

Tuesday’s breakdown drew the second round of stinging criticism for Georgia election officials since 2018, when the state’s closely watched gubernator­ial election was marred by hourslong waits at some polling sites, security breaches that exposed voter informatio­n and accusation­s that strict ID requiremen­ts and registrati­on errors suppressed turnout. That led to lawsuits and changes to state law that included the $120 million switch to a new election system.

Much of the outcry over the 2018 election targeted Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, who still served as secretary of state when he ran for governor two years ago. Kemp has so far stayed silent on the most recent problems.

Votes were still being counted Wednesday, including absentee ballots that topped 1 million — the result of many voters trying to avoid trips to the polls because of the virus.

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