The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Campaigns war over voting rules

Amplifying concerns: Georgia could be in play in presidenti­al race.

- ELECTION 2016 By Kristina Torres ktorres@ajc.com

Georgia voters over the past four years have been served legal summonses to prove where they lived, purged from the rolls and rejected from registerin­g to vote.

The question is whether any of that will have a chilling effect on voter participat­ion this presidenti­al election.

Voting rights advocacy groups have made Georgia one of the most closely watched states in the nation, citing such examples to highlight their fears that the state’s top elections agency has become too partisan, has tried to hinder registrati­ons or find ways to suppress turnout. The concerns are being amplified by the fact that Georgia could be in play in the presidenti­al race, with Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton slightly ahead of Republican candidate Donald Trump in some state polls, including one done earlier this month for The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

Republican Secretary of State

Brian Kemp adamantly denies those allegation­s, crisscross­ing the state to tout the accessibil­ity and security of elections here. This November, he has said, will be no different, despite critics’ assertions that the state has had an inordinate amount of problems leading up to the election.

“I would just say this to any person in Georgia that meets the requiremen­ts to be a registered voter or someone who is already a registered voter,” Kemp said in a recent interview with Mundo Hispanico, a sister publicatio­n of the AJC. “It has never been easier in my opinion to participat­e in the process in Georgia than it has been right now.”

‘Vote is under attack’

Michelle Kanter Cohen, the election counsel for the Washington-based nonprofit Project Vote, isn’t so sure.

The group sued Georgia in July over concerns it was not releasing detailed informatio­n about why voter registrati­on applicatio­ns are rejected, citing among other concerns the resignatio­n last year of Kemp’s longtime elections director, who left after it was discovered the state accidental­ly canceled the registrati­on of nearly 8,000 voters before a key 2014 election.

Project Vote’s suit followed back-and-forth negotiatio­ns over the past two years between the group and the state, which said it had responded in good faith to multiple data requests by the group. Kanter Cohen said the group was trying to discern whether “people were not getting on the rolls when they applied in larger numbers than usual,” such as during voter registrati­on drives. “We are trying to understand what the state is doing and help educate voters,” she said.

It’s the second federal lawsuit served on Kemp’s agency this year over its handling of voter records.

In February, the Georgia NAACP and government watchdog group Common Cause accused it of “purging” more than 370,000 voters “due to failure to vote.” They sued over the state’s longtime practice of sending “confirmati­on of address” notices to voters who haven’t cast a ballot in three years and removing them from voter rolls if they eventually do not respond.

State officials have called the suit frivolous and said what they do is allowed by federal law.

Voting rights advocates have also hissed over recent local actions that they said should have received condemnati­on from Kemp’s office. They include an attempt earlier this year to temporaril­y move a MaconBibb County polling location in a majority-black neighborho­od into a nearby sheriff ’s office building and, separately, a legal fight last year in Hancock County over whether the majority-white county election board tried to purge African-American voters from the rolls of a local town before a federal judge stepped in.

“The vote is under attack,” said Statesboro attorney Francys Johnson, who is also president of the Georgia NAACP — an organizati­on that has petitioned the U.S. Justice Department to consider sending federal monitors here for the election.

GOP nominee Trump has also called for his own poll monitors to prevent a “rigged” election in November, although political parties in Georgia commonly use volunteer poll watchers as part of standard Election Day operations that also include their own set of attorneys.

But is all the talk of a rigged system and voter suppressio­n rhetoric or fact?

Dariah Holsey has never been old enough to cast a ballot until now, when on an overcast and muggy Saturday in August, the 19-yearold from Savannah strolled into Atlanta’s Sweet Auburn Curb Market and came face to face with Norman Cervantes.

It was an old-fashioned exchange in today’s modern world: Cervantes, a volunteer on a registrati­on drive for the legal nonprofit Asian Americans Advancing Justice-Atlanta, held a clipboard with a paper voter registrati­on form. Holsey, in town visiting her grandmothe­r, took hold of a pen and wrote down her informatio­n, pulling out her driver’s license to make sure she had everything right.

Bernita Holsey, her grandmothe­r, couldn’t help but smile. She had also been present when her then18-year-old daughter had registered to vote, and the memory brought to mind the encouragem­ent they had shared about the need for “young people” to get involved.

Her granddaugh­ter handed the clipboard back to Cervantes, then took a moment to consider what she had done and whether she expected any problem getting accepted onto Georgia’s voter rolls.

“I haven’t been a part of the cause, but one vote can make a difference,” Dariah Holsey said. “I feel like you have to learn to trust. Everything happens in time. I’m willing to try now because you never know where it goes.”

Keeping system open

Critics’ concerns come as the U.S. Department of Justice recently announced a significan­t reduction in its use of federal election observers, something it said came as a consequenc­e of a 2013 U.S. Supreme Court decision striking down a key provision in the national Voting Rights Act.

The court’s decision overturned a federal elections mandate known as “Section 5” that required jurisdicti­ons with a history of racial discrimina­tion in voting to seek approval from the Justice Department or federal courts before making changes to voting rules.

Georgia is still one of 11 states certified by the department for federal observers in some local jurisdicti­ons — 29 counties in all. But the department has said it would concentrat­e observers in five other states where federal court rulings have prioritize­d monitoring: Alabama, Alaska, California, Louisiana and New York.

“Georgia is one of the places historical­ly where the Justice Department has deployed observers to safeguard voting rights,” said Kristen Clarke, the president and executive director of the Washington-based Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.

With the likelihood of that now lessened, the group is among a number of nonpartisa­n organizati­ons mobilizing independen­t elections monitors and throwing resources into reporting tools such as an “election protection” hotline for voters to report problems such as flagged registrati­ons, equipment malfunctio­ns and issues with polling locations.

The organizati­on has had a testy relationsh­ip with the Secretary of State’s Office and has been active in several voting-related lawsuits here. But Clarke said there are signs things may be getting better.

This spring, Kemp’s agency ended its support of a so-called 90-day blackout period after registrati­on deadlines — a practice during which voter forms were not processed to ensure that ineligible voters did not cast a ballot in the election.

The effect wasn’t immediate. Just last month, some counties — including Fulton County, which had close to 55,000 applicatio­ns pending at the end of July — still waited to fully process some voter registrati­on applicatio­ns until after the state’s primary runoff election. But it was a start.

“Litigation is not the only way to resolve issues; working cooperativ­ely with state and local officials when we can is also key to ensure that our voting system remains open this voting cycle,” Clarke said.

‘Accessible as ... ever’

Kemp was a Republican state senator when Georgia lawmakers in 2005 passed one of the nation’s first voter ID laws, requiring people to show photo identifica­tion at their polling location. State officials — who won court approval to implement the law in 2007 — said it would stop fraud; critics said it was designed to suppress the vote, particular­ly in minority communitie­s.

Instead, turnout among black and Hispanic voters increased, outpacing population growth for those groups in the law’s first five years of effect, according to an analysis done by the AJC in 2012. There has also been little evidence of the type of ballot fraud the law was created to prevent, although Republican leaders in Georgia still support it.

Voter ID laws were all the rage in states run by Republican legislatur­es starting in the 2000s, so what the GOP General Assembly did in Georgia wasn’t particular­ly unusual.

“The movement was we should do everything we can to protect the sanctity of the vote and having to provide a photo ID is not an onerous requiremen­t,” said Eric Johnson, who was the top Republican in the state Senate when the bill passed. “I believe those that are opposed to photo ID are using it to gin up votes as a false issue to beat up on conservati­ves or whoever is in power.”

Kemp, who voted for the measure in 2005, said he thinks the state has tried hard to be responsibl­e in how it oversees elections. The voter ID law — variations of which have been overturned this year in states including North Carolina and Wisconsin — is one example.

“The thing that makes our law a little different here and one reason that we’ve won all our lawsuits is that ... nobody’s ever been able to find a voter in Georgia that couldn’t vote because they didn’t have a photo ID because we’ll issue one for free if you don’t have it,” Kemp said. “What I think it’s designed to do is to make sure we have secure elections, that only the people who are supposed to be participat­ing are.”

Kemp, who has been secretary of state since 2010, has also made a signature attempt to overhaul how voters interact with his agency.

Earlier this month, he announced a pilot program allowing residents to register to vote via text message. He has widely promoted mobile apps that can also be used to register or confirm a voter’s registrati­on status. And in 2014, he launched the state’s first-ever online voter registrati­on system, allowing people to register through the internet.

More registered voters than ever now fill Georgia’s rolls. About 6 million people were registered in 2012. Now it’s more than 6.4 million.

And then there are the elections themselves, which include 45 days of advanced voting by mail; 21 days of in-person early voting, including a mandatory Saturday; and Sunday voting in some jurisdicti­ons.

“This, with some people, is a very political issue,” Kemp said. “But I think if you really look at the merits of where we are in Georgia right now, registerin­g to vote and being able to participat­e in elections is as accessible as it’s ever been.”

Key dates coming up

Georgia’s next election is Nov. 8. But the voting process actually begins in less than a month.

Absentee ballots for the presidenti­al election are set to begin going out to voters Sept. 20. The state’s deadline to register for the election is Oct. 11. Early in-person voting begins statewide Oct. 17.

For many voters, there is no question that they will be properly counted when they raise their hand this fall. Kevin Lee, 39, who moved to Atlanta from Maryland after leaving the military last year, didn’t hesitate when asked about it as he filled out a voter registrati­on form recently.

“Why do I believe my vote will be counted? Being honest with you, it wasn’t until (Barack) Obama ran eight years ago that it was my first time voting,” Lee said. “You have people who don’t vote and then they try to make excuses as to why things aren’t happening the way things should.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Norman Cervantes (center), with Asian Americans Advancing Justice - Atlanta, talks to Bernita Holsey (left) of Atlanta as he helps Holsey’s granddaugh­ter Dariah Holsey (right), 19, with her voter registrati­on in the Sweet Auburn Curb Market. “One vote...
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Norman Cervantes (center), with Asian Americans Advancing Justice - Atlanta, talks to Bernita Holsey (left) of Atlanta as he helps Holsey’s granddaugh­ter Dariah Holsey (right), 19, with her voter registrati­on in the Sweet Auburn Curb Market. “One vote...
 ?? AJC 2015 ?? Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp touts the accessibil­ity and security of elections as this year’s presidenti­al vote approaches. “It has never been easier in my opinion to participat­e in the process in Georgia than it has been right now.”
AJC 2015 Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp touts the accessibil­ity and security of elections as this year’s presidenti­al vote approaches. “It has never been easier in my opinion to participat­e in the process in Georgia than it has been right now.”

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