The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHAT WENT WRONG

‘Unacceptab­le’ delays highlight need for fixes before November vote.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

Georgia’s messy election day once again put the state’s voting struggles in the national spotlight, highlighti­ng the need for improvemen­ts before a high-turnout presidenti­al election in November.

Several voting rights groups summed up the election in one word: “unacceptab­le.”

After months of postponeme­nts and preparatio­ns, the election was marred by long lines, technical difficulti­es and voter confusion. Some voters waited more than five hours before finally casting their ballots after midnight at one precinct, a church in Union City south of Atlanta.

The problems resulted in finger-pointing and investigat­ions but few concrete solutions before runoffs Aug. 11 and the general election Nov. 3. State and county election officials said they would improve poll worker training and consider adding voting precincts.

Challenges facing voters, especially those in heavily African American neighborho­ods, led to accusation­s of voter suppressio­n.

“Georgia’s election was a complete catastroph­e,” said Kristen Clarke, the president of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, a Washington-based civil rights organizati­on. “If we view the primary election as a dry run for November, then Georgia gets an F.”

While some lines on election day were expected because of social-distancing requiremen­ts during the coronaviru­s, no one predicted the extent of difficulti­es facing voters Tuesday, especially in DeKalb and Fulton counties. There were warning signs, however, such as precinct closures, poll worker shortages and absentee ballots that never reached voters’ mailboxes.

Poll workers couldn’t get the state’s new voting equipment working. Voting machines were delivered after polls opened in some precincts in Fulton and Gwinnett counties. Precincts closed because of the coronaviru­s, some shortly before election day, forcing voters into fewer voting locations.

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger also said it was unacceptab­le for voters to wait in hourslong lines that wrapped around buildings. He said he’ll review what could be done better and what additional training is needed.

“I will continue to work with our county elections boards and directors to train them to properly deliver, install and maintain our voting system,” said Raffensper­ger, a Republican who took office last year. “It is clear that some counties continue to not perform. It is the responsibi­lity of the counties to properly deliver and install equipment. It is the responsibi­lity of the counties to properly train its poll workers.”

Raffensper­ger said counties are in charge of running elections, but he faced criticism for not doing more to help them prepare.

Twenty of Georgia’s 159 counties kept precincts open late Tuesday because of problems. Raffensper­ger said his office will support county election officials before upcoming elections.

The state had 175 tech support staffers across the state Tuesday, but they were quickly overwhelme­d by calls. Poll workers said they had trouble encoding voter access cards, logging into tablets and starting up voting computers.

Raffensper­ger opened an investigat­ion into voting problems in DeKalb and Fulton counties on Tuesday, a step that could result in fines or recommenda­tions from the State Elections Board.

An attorney in an election security lawsuit against Raffensper­ger said investigat­ions need to be independen­t from his office.

“That is like letting Tom Brady investigat­e Deflategat­e or letting Nixon investigat­e Watergate,” said Bruce Brown, who represents voters seeking to replace voting computers with hand-marked paper ballots. “Georgia, thanks to its leadership, again looks like the most incompeten­t and poorly run state in the nation.”

House Speaker David Ralston also opened a legislativ­e investigat­ion into voting problems but stopped short of calling for new state laws. He said the General Assembly could consider a measure, Senate Bill 463, to open more precincts if it has time after passing the state budget this month.

“We have an obligation to make sure some of the problems we had yesterday don’t happen,” Ralston, a Republican from Blue Ridge, said Tuesday on “Political Rewind” on Georgia Public Broadcasti­ng. “There was a lot of voter frustratio­n yesterday.”

Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden’s campaign also condemned Georgia’s election process, calling it “completely unacceptab­le.”

Georgia voters deserve better, said Aunna Dennis, the executive director for Common Cause Georgia, a government accountabi­lity group.

“Today’s problems were avoidable — and they disenfranc­hised voters,” Dennis said. “That must not be allowed to happen again.”

If problems aren’t corrected, Georgia’s recent voting history from the 2018 election for governor and Tuesday’s primary could repeat itself. And November’s election will be much more difficult to run. Turnout in November is expected to reach 5 million voters, well over double the number of voters in the primary.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Fulton County employees continue to count mailed absentee ballots Wednesday at the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta. Final vote tallies from Tuesday’s election aren’t expected until Friday, officials said.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Fulton County employees continue to count mailed absentee ballots Wednesday at the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta. Final vote tallies from Tuesday’s election aren’t expected until Friday, officials said.

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