The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

An aggressive push is underway to register voters in 6th District

- By Kristina Torres ktorres@ajc.com

Groups seeking to sign up more voters in Georgia’s 6th Congressio­nal District have been out in force over the past week in front of grocery stores and going door to door, trying to take advantage of a judge’s order reopening voter registrati­on in metro Atlanta’s northern suburbs.

The push is only going to continue, although it comes as unregister­ed voters in these parts may be hard to find. An analysis by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on has shown an already highly motivated — and registered — dis

trict. The 6th likely has a lower percentage of unregister­ed voting-age residents (those 18 years and older) living in it than any of the state’s other congressio­nal districts.

But some of the groups believe there could be tens of thousands of people who are eligible but not on the rolls.

“We’re kind of scrambling to make the most of this new opportunit­y,” said Raymond Partolan with Asian Americans Advancing Justice — Atlanta, one of five civil rights and voting rights organizati­ons that sued the state last month over its handling of voter registrati­on ahead of all federal runoff elections.

The lawsuit is ongoing, but U.S. District Judge Timothy Batten in the interim gave would-be 6th District voters until May 21 to register ahead of a June 20 runoff in the nationally watched race between Republican Karen Handel and Democrat Jon Ossoff.

His ruling has sparked a rush of activity, from voter registrati­on tables being set up in front of a Wal-Mart in DeKalb County to sign-ups at a regional naturaliza­tion ceremony.

The group Partolan works with held a registrati­on drive Friday at DeKalb County’s Cross Keys High School, logging registrati­ons from 23 students. On Saturday, it began the first of 12 planned canvasses over the next week in the 6th District as he and three volunteers met in Johns Creek and then fanned out to area neighborho­ods. Seventy-five percent of the time, he said, no one answers the door and the group leaves a pamphlet reminding residents of the upcoming election and instructio­ns for how to register to vote online.

Saturday morning, however, a number of people were home. One of them was Ahmed Baosman, whose quiet, manicured cul-de-sac appeared to be devoid of campaign signs. Baosman is registered but was on the group’s list as a “low to mid-propensity” voter. The group’s work is not political; it was there to encourage him to go to the polls no matter whom he supported.

“It’s very important,” Baosman replied, saying he had every intention of voting in the runoff. “We have to decide on our people who are in there because who understand­s our things and what problems we have?”

Such is the effort that will continue through May 21. Druid Hills, Johns Creek and Northview high schools in DeKalb and Fulton counties have all been targeted for registrati­on drives either in the past week or in the upcoming days before the new registrati­on window closes.

“We’ve been doing something just about every day,” said Helen Butler, who leads the Georgia Coalition for the Peoples’ Agenda, another of the groups that sued.

Those groups are nonpartisa­n and don’t approach or target potential registrant­s based on politics. Their goal, they say, is strictly voter engagement. But the campaigns themselves have also jumped into action, with representa­tives for both Handel and Ossoff saying they have tried to use events in the community as a way to engage both voters and potential voters.

The 6th District overall tends to be a highly motivated district. Turnout in the district during the presidenti­al election topped 66 percent, compared with a statewide turnout of 63 percent.

And while the average turnout during off-year special elections is notoriousl­y low, Georgia’s 6th District special election on April 18 (which decided who was in next month’s runoff ) topped a respectabl­e 37 percent — nearly 194,000 people voted. That’s a turnout that looks more like a midterm contest than a special election.

The big question, however, is how many of those voters will make a return to the polls June 20. Turnout during runoffs usually drops from the main election that preceded it. And with the idea that newly registered voters are likely to be more motivated to vote immediatel­y, even the addition of a few hundred voters could make a significan­t impact on the runoff.

“The Handel campaign is taking full advantage of the new period to register new voters, as well as contact those who have been newly registered,” Handel spokesman Charlie Harper said. “In addition, we are targeting voters who traditiona­lly vote but did not take advantage of the April 18 election.”

Ossoff ’s team, meanwhile, has hosted tables or booths at community events and spoken to college and high school students about civic engagement. The campaign says it signs up, on average, about 100 new voters a day.

“Voting rights are constituti­onal rights, and our campaign remains committed to encouragin­g all eligible voters to ensure that they are registered and to make their voices heard on June 20 and in all elections,” said Keenan Pontoni, Ossoff ’s campaign manager.

The 6th District includes parts of three of metro Atlanta’s most populous counties — Cobb, DeKalb and Fulton — and it already boasts more than 521,000 registered voters.

Looking at current registered voters as a percentage of 2015 population estimates (the most recent data available from the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey), the 6th District looks to have the highest percentage of all the congressio­nal districts in the state.

Exactly how many eligible residents are not registered, however, is hard to say. The census count lags two years behind the state’s most recent voter roll count, and there’s no way to say just how many there currently are.

Nse Ufot of the New Georgia Project, using the group’s own estimate, believes there could be just under 27,000 eligible but unregister­ed African-Americans in the 6th District alone. The group, which is nonpartisa­n and another organizati­on involved in the suit, began as an offshoot of efforts by state House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams, D-Atlanta, to reach minority communitie­s who were not engaged in the political process.

“We hit the ground running,” said Ufot, whose group is helped by a core of about 30 people, most of them volunteers, organizing registrati­on tables and registrati­on canvasses. “We don’t want to miss harnessing this energy.”

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC ?? Volunteer Jongwon Lee (left) and Asian Americans Advancing Justice program associate Raymond Partolan (center) talk with Johns Creek homeowner Dr. Ahmed Baosman at his home Saturday.
STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC Volunteer Jongwon Lee (left) and Asian Americans Advancing Justice program associate Raymond Partolan (center) talk with Johns Creek homeowner Dr. Ahmed Baosman at his home Saturday.
 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC ?? Volunteer Jongwon Lee (left) and Asian Americans Advancing Justice program associate Raymond Partolan walk through a Johns Creek neighborho­od. They talked with residents about the new voter registrati­on deadline.
STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC Volunteer Jongwon Lee (left) and Asian Americans Advancing Justice program associate Raymond Partolan walk through a Johns Creek neighborho­od. They talked with residents about the new voter registrati­on deadline.

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