The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

SECRETARY OF STATE RUNOFF: WHAT THE KEY ISSUES ARE

Race for secretary of state, while relatively quiet, is important.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

After an election marred by voting problems, Georgia voters will decide in Tuesday’s runoff who should fix them.

One candidate for Georgia secretary of state wants to tackle voter purges, long lines and voting rights. His opponent prefers leaving most elections management to county officials and improving training.

Democrat John Barrow, a former congressma­n, said he’d seek both voting fairness and accuracy if elected as the state’s top elections official. He faces Republican Brad Raffensper­ger, an engineerin­g firm CEO who said he would ensure only U.S. citizens can vote and mostly maintain Georgia’s current election process.

Voting rights became a major issue during this year’s close elec- tion for governor that dragged on for nearly two weeks amid confusion over how to count ballots with missing informatio­n, voters whose registrati­ons weren’t processed and equipment malfunctio­ns. Georgia’s former secretary of state, Republican Brian Kemp, won the election for governor against Democrat Stacey Abrams, whose allies filed a federal lawsuit this week over election irregulari­ties.

Barrow trailed Raffensper­ger by less than 1 percentage point in the Nov. 6 general election, and

a runoff is required because neither candidate won a majority of the votes. Libertaria­n Smythe DuVal, who has endorsed Barrow, received just over 2 percent of the vote.

Barrow is running as a moderate who said he believes in maintainin­g Georgia’s photo ID laws but making it more difficult to cancel someone’s voter registrati­on.

Raffensper­ger, a conservati­ve state representa­tive from Johns Creek since 2015, emphasizes the need to combat potential voter fraud, which is extremely rare in Georgia in part because of the requiremen­t for voters to show photo ID.

“The only problem he wants to talk about is the one we’re already solving,” Barrow said in an interview. “He doesn’t want to address the problem of purges, which go too far and purge people through no fault of their own. What we need is somebody who can address (voting rights) issues in a bipartisan fashion.”

Raffensper­ger didn’t make himself available for an interview this week, and he skipped a televised debate Tuesday so he could attend a fundraisin­g event for his campaign in Moultrie. The debate went on with Barrow debating against an empty podium.

As an engineer and CEO, Raffensper­ger has said he’s most qualified to manage the Secretary of State’s Office, which oversees elections, business registrati­ons and profession­al licensing. If elected, he said he’d support county election officials.

Raffensper­ger minimized the problems voters encountere­d with registrati­ons, lines and voting machines during this month’s election.

“There’s been a lot of hyperbole. People have spun things up out of whole cloth in many instances,” Raffensper­ger said on The Shelley Wynter Show on WYAY-FM this week. “If you look at how many precincts we have in this election, and how many issues we’ve had, there was actually very few precincts” with problems.

After the intense election for governor earlier this month, the runoff for secretary of state is relatively quiet, with low turnout expected.

But Georgians should pay attention to the race if they care about democracy and voting rights, said Sara Henderson, executive director for Common Cause Georgia, a government accountabi­lity organizati­on.

“The ideal candidate would support an open, transparen­t office and is willing to submit the office to a full audit to help ensure transparen­cy,” Henderson said. “Of all the campaign promises, transparen­cy is key. Citizens must have a knowledge and input in all decisions related to our elections systems in Georgia.”

Among the biggest difference­s between the candidates is how they’d approach canceling registrati­ons of inactive voters. The registrati­ons of more than 1.4 million Georgia voters were canceled since 2012, in many cases because they didn’t vote in at least two federal election cycles or respond to letters from election officials.

Raffensper­ger said voter lists need to be regularly pared down to remove people who might have moved or died, and that voters’ failure to participat­e in elections indicates they might not be eligible Georgia voters.

“We need to make sure that we keep the voter rolls clean, fresh and accurate,” Raffensper­ger told Channel 2 Action News last week. “At the end of the day, we want to make sure that who shows up is who they say they are.”

Barrow said voters shouldn’t lose their voting rights just because they haven’t used them. He said voters often discard letters from election officials because they look like junk mail, and the government should make greater efforts to confirm someone has moved before disqualify­ing them from voting.

“It should not be easier to get kicked off the rolls as an honest citizen minding your own business than it is to get your water turned off,” Barrow said. “They’ve been purged without their knowing about it, and their vote will not get counted. It’s happening to a lot of people, and that’s not acceptable.”

Both candidates say it’s time to replace Georgia’s 16-year-old electronic voting machines with a system that leaves a verifiable paper trail, but they disagree on the best option. The Georgia General Assembly will consider legislatio­n to buy a new voting system next year, at a cost of $20 million to over $100 million, and the secretary of state will be responsibl­e for implementi­ng it.

Raffensper­ger prefers buying touchscree­n machines that print a ballot for voters to review and then insert into an optical scanner for tabulation. Barrow supports filling out paper ballots by hand and then feeding them into a scanner.

The solution favored by Raffensper­ger, called ballot-marking devices, would help prevent human errors but be more expensive than hand-marked paper ballots. They would also put another computer between voters and their ballots, raising concerns from election integrity advocates about the potential for elections to be hacked.

Barrow said hand-marked paper ballots prevent hacking, and if elected he would decertify Georgia’s current direct-recording electronic voting machines because he said they can’t be trusted to produce accurate results.

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 ??  ?? Democrat John Barrow (left) is running as a moderate. Republican Brad Raffensper­ger would mostly maintain the current election process.
Democrat John Barrow (left) is running as a moderate. Republican Brad Raffensper­ger would mostly maintain the current election process.
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