The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Misleading’ forms will be changed

Ga. election officials agree to change in response to complaint.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

Georgia election officials have agreed to change voter registrati­on forms in response to a complaint that they misreprese­nted ID requiremen­ts for first-time voters.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia sought the change because the registrati­on form says new voters must provide documentat­ion of their name and address with their mailed applicatio­ns.

But federal election law only requires identifica­tion from firsttime voters at some point before they cast a ballot, not at the time they register to vote.

“Election officials must protect — rather than undermine — our sacred, fundamenta­l right to vote,” said Sean Young, the legal director for the ACLU of Georgia. “When election officials include false and misleading informatio­n on official voter registrati­on forms, they undermine our democracy.”

A spokeswoma­n for Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp said Friday that the language on the form has been in place since 2004 and hasn’t prevented any voter from registerin­g.

“The fact that the ACLU is issuing press releases and claiming

a great victory for voting rights over something they have not cared about for 15 years and has not actually affected any Georgia voters demonstrat­es that no matter how hard they look, they cannot find any real problems,” spokeswoma­n

Candice Broce said.

The Secretary of State’s Office is reviewing the language on the form but hasn’t yet decided how it will be clarified.

In the meantime, the current voter registrati­on forms will continue to be provided to potential voters and accepted by the state.

The ACLU objected to the voter registrati­on form in a

Feb. 20 letter to Kemp. Just eight days later, the ACLU said Kemp consented to change what the organizati­on called “an egregious error.”

The issue was brought to the ACLU’s attention by Marc Merlin, a Georgia resident who helps others register to vote.

The Georgia voter registrati­on form includes a highlighte­d section in bold type

saying it’s a requiremen­t to submit a photo ID, copy of a utility bill, bank statement, paycheck or other government document that shows name and address.

“This requiremen­t is blatantly wrong . ... Nothing in state or federal law requires first-time registrant­s by mail to provide documentar­y proof of name and address along with their voter registrati­on

applicatio­n,” according to the ACLU’s letter to Kemp. “They do not have to provide that documentar­y proof of name and residence until the time that they actually vote for the first time in Georgia.”

The ACLU was also successful in another complaint against Kemp’s office last month.

A settlement between the

ACLU and the state requires that voters must be kept in active status even when they don’t confirm their addresses after moving to a new residence in the same county.

The ACLU had alleged in a lawsuit filed last year that the state wasn’t complying with laws requiring election officials to automatica­lly update voters’ addresses.

 ?? CASEY SYKES / CASEY.SYKES@AJC.COM ?? A woman votes at the Buckhead Library in Atlanta on Oct. 26, 2017. State officials have agreed to change voter registrati­on forms to clarify identifica­tion requiremen­ts.
CASEY SYKES / CASEY.SYKES@AJC.COM A woman votes at the Buckhead Library in Atlanta on Oct. 26, 2017. State officials have agreed to change voter registrati­on forms to clarify identifica­tion requiremen­ts.
 ??  ?? Georgia’s voter registrati­on form currently includes a section that says it’s a requiremen­t for first-time voters to verify their name and address when they register. The form will be changed in response to a complaint from the ACLU that identifyin­g...
Georgia’s voter registrati­on form currently includes a section that says it’s a requiremen­t for first-time voters to verify their name and address when they register. The form will be changed in response to a complaint from the ACLU that identifyin­g...

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