The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Groups mass mail absentee ballot forms

Letters contain applicatio­ns pre-filled with names, addresses.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.Niesse@ajc.com

About 2.2 million applicatio­ns sent pre-filled with voters’ names and addresses.

Over 2.2 million absentee ballot applicatio­n forms were recently mailed to Georgia voters, an unofficial solicitati­on from organizati­ons encouragin­g absentee voting.

The letters contain absentee ballot applicatio­n forms, pre-filled with voters’ names and addresses. They come from a pair of nonprofit organizati­ons, the Center for Voter Informatio­n and the Voter Participat­ion Center.

The organizati­ons sent the mailings primarily to people of color, unmarried women and young people, said Tom Lopach, the president and CEO of both nonprofits. They also targeted mailings to voters by geographic area based on nonpartisa­n data sources and public voter registrati­on lists, he said.

“They have a right to vote, they’ve signed up to vote, and we should do anything we can to help them vote,” Lopach said.

But election officials say voters should manage their own decisions to vote by absentee ballot, without depending on a thirdparty group.

“There are many special-interest groups around the country who are targeting key voters for absentee ballot applicatio­ns,”

Deputy Secretary of State Jordan Fuchs said. “Most simply want to help you. Others may aim to confuse you — or worse, steal your private informatio­n.”

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger mailed absentee ballot applicatio­ns to 6.9 million active voters ahead of the June primary election, helping them vote from home during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

But for this fall’s general election, Raffensper­ger is replacing that mailing program with a web

site where voters will soon be able to request absentee ballots.

The website is scheduled to launch within days, and then voters who sign up to receive absentee ballots can expect them to be mailed to them starting Sept. 20.

So far, 104,000 voters reached by the Center for Voter Informatio­n and Voter Participat­ion Center have returned their postage-paid absentee ballot request forms to county election offices, according to postal tracking informatio­n, Lopach said.

Voters in states such as Georgia, where the government isn’t mailing absentee ballot applicatio­ns, are receiving more mail from the organizati­ons.

About 70 million absentee ballot request forms are being sent by the groups nationwide.

Lee-Ann Williams, a Doraville resident, said she was concerned when she received the absentee ballot applicatio­n from the Center for Voter Informatio­n because it excluded the hyphen in her first name.

“That triggered a feeling that this could screw up my ballot,” Williams said. “I didn’t ascribe anything nefarious to it. I’m all for it if it’s accurate.”

She threw away the mailing and instead filled out her own absentee applicatio­n.

Some voters will receive multiple absentee ballot request forms, but only one ballot can be issued per voter. Election officials will discard duplicate absentee requests.

The organizati­ons plan to mail second and third waves of absentee ballot request forms to some voters who don’t sign up to receive an absentee ballot, Lopach said.

In addition, DeKalb County might mail absentee ballot request forms to the county’s more than 555,000 registered voters.

Georgia law allows any registered voter to use an absentee ballot.

More than 1.15 million voters in Georgia cast absentee ballots in the June 9 primary, nearly half of the total turnout.

Voters can request an absentee ballot themselves by downloadin­g and filling out an absentee request form from the secretary of state’s website, then mailing it to their county’s elections office.

Voters can also return the form sent to them by the CVI or VPC.

The state’s absentee ballot request form website will eliminate the need to print and mail a paper form.

The website is scheduled to go online before the end of this month.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Mail-in paper ballots wait to be scanned by Fulton County employees at the Georgia World Congress Center during the Georgia primary. Voters will soon be able to request ballots online.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Mail-in paper ballots wait to be scanned by Fulton County employees at the Georgia World Congress Center during the Georgia primary. Voters will soon be able to request ballots online.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States