The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Candidates spar over election integrity

Atlanta Press Club’s debate to air on Georgia Public Broadcasti­ng.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

The three Georgia secretary of state candidates on Tuesday debated how to protect elections from outside interferen­ce.

The three candidates for Georgia secretary of state on Tuesday debated how to replace the state’s outdated voting machines and protect the sanctity of elections from outside interferen­ce.

Democrat John Barrow committed to using the power of the secretary of state to quickly move to unhackable paper ballots. Republican Brad Raffensper­ger said his business experience as an engineerin­g firm’s CEO makes him the most qualified to run a complex government office. And Libertaria­n Smythe DuVal said he’s the only independen­t fiscal conservati­ve in the race.

The winner of the Nov. 6 elec- tion will be responsibl­e for overseeing Georgia’s elections, business registrati­ons and profession­al licensing. Georgia’s current secretary of state, Republican Brian Kemp, is running for governor against Democrat Stacey Abrams and will leave office at the end of the year.

Raffensper­ger, a state representa­tive from Johns Creek, said he would cancel the registrati­ons of ineligible voters to ensure election integrity. The Georgia Secretary of State’s Office last year canceled 668,000 registrati­ons of voters who hadn’t participat­ed in elections in several years, or who had died, moved or been convicted of a felony, among other reasons.

“By keeping the voter rolls updated, we can help safeguard and keep our elections clean so we know that the person who won actually did win,” Raffensper­ger said during the debate presented by the Atlanta Press Club and aired by Georgia Public Broadcasti­ng. “I’m the only business owner in this race that has run an office the size of the Secretary of State’s Office.”

Barrow, who served in Congress for a decade, said he’s more concerned about the threat of hacking or foreign interferen­ce after Russians attempted to sway the outcome of the 2016 presidenti­al election.

If elected, Barrow said he would decertify Georgia’s direct-recording electronic voting machines, which don’t leave a verifiable paper trail showing voters’ intent. State legislator­s plan to consider buying a new statewide voting system next year, but Barrow said Georgia’s touchscree­ns are too unsafe to continue using in the meantime.

“They’re not good enough for elections because they can be hacked,” Barrow said. “What we need is to decertify these machines and move to the process currently allowed by state law, which is handmarked paper ballots using optical scanners.”

DuVal, an informatio­n technology graduate student and registered nurse, said hand-marked paper ballots are the most secure and cost-effective voting system. He said taxpayers shouldn’t have to pay more than $100 million for the type of voting system preferred by Raffensper­ger, called ballot-marking devices, that would use touchscree­n voting machines to print out paper ballots.

“I want to fix Georgia’s broken election system,” DuVal said. “I’m sick and tired of the partisansh­ip between the Democrat and Republican party. We are pursuing competitiv­e, fair and secure elections.”

DuVal also said Georgia should adopt same-day voter registrati­on as a way to make it easier to vote and ensure accurate voter registrati­on lists.

Barrow attacked Raffensper­ger, calling him a “rich deadbeat” for failing to pay off more than $5,000 in old tax liens until it became an issue in the Republican primary election against former Alpharetta Mayor David Belle Isle.

“If that ain’t disqualify­ing, it should be,” Barrow said.

Raffensper­ger responded that his businesses pay more than $1 million in taxes nationwide annually, and he resolved the tax dispute when it came to his attention this summer.

“One of the things I do every day, as an engineer and a business owner, is solve problems,” Raffensper­ger said. “That’s what I want to do” as secretary of state.

The debate will be broadcast on Georgia Public Broadcasti­ng at 7 p.m. today.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Georgia secretary of state candidates debate Tuesday at Georgia Public Broadcasti­ng in Atlanta. Democrat John Barrow (left), Libertaria­n Smythe DuVal and Republican Brad Raffensper­ger discussed how to ensure Georgia voting integrity. Atlanta Press Club’s debate airs on GPB tonight.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Georgia secretary of state candidates debate Tuesday at Georgia Public Broadcasti­ng in Atlanta. Democrat John Barrow (left), Libertaria­n Smythe DuVal and Republican Brad Raffensper­ger discussed how to ensure Georgia voting integrity. Atlanta Press Club’s debate airs on GPB tonight.

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