The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Greene falsely claims ‘ scam’ in spouse’s vote

‘ He only voted one time,’ election official confirms.

- By Chris Joyner chris. joyner@ ajc. com and Jennifer Pee bl es jennifer. peebles@ ajc. com Staffwrite­r Mark Niesse contribute­d to this report.

In weekend tweets, Congresswo­man-Elect Marjorie Taylor Greene joined the chorus of hardened Trump supporters seeking to discredit Georgia’s elections with her own claim that someone obtained an absentee ballot in her husband’s name.

“Georgia Election Scam!” she wrote. “My husband never requested an absentee ballot, butwhen hewent to vote they told him that they had already received his absentee ballot. But he NEVER requested an absentee ballot nor did he send one in!”

Greene posted a screenshot of Perry Greene’s voter informatio­n page on the Georgia Secretary of State’s website showing her husband voted early in Floyd County on Oct. 23 and that the vote was accepted.

The screen also shows a second ballot, requested and received the same day, was canceled.

“What really happened to the other ballot?” she wrote.

Nothing happened, said Robert Brady, chief clerk of elections for Floyd County. More specifical­ly, it was canceled according to procedure.

“According to this, he signed an affidavit on the 23rd and he was allowed to vote,” he said. “He only voted one time.”

Efforts to under mine Georgia’ selection began building after President-elect Joe Biden overtook President Trump in the count last week, and intensifie­d over the weekend after Biden won Pennsylvan­ia.

President Trump questioned Georgia’s count with misleading tweets about military ballots.

“Where are the missing military ballots in Georgia?” Trump tweeted last week. “What happened to them?”

In a news conference last week, Gabriel Sterling, Georgia’s voting system manager for the secretary of state’s office, addressed the tweet, saying therewere no “missing” ballots. He said some 18,000 military ballots had been received and counted, and at that time, therewere 8,410 still out. The deadline for receiving military and overseas ballots was Nov. 6.

“That does not mean that there’s a bucket of 8,410 votes to be counted,” Sterling said. “It’s going to be more than 0 and less than 8,410.”

Election officials continued counting outstandin­g ballots Monday, including military ballots received by Friday’s deadline. On Monday afternoon, the state had 18,407 overseas and military ballots cast, and 7,786 ballots requested but not returned before Friday’s deadline.

Greene began tweeting about her husband’s ballot Sunday, and by Monday evening it had been retweeted more than 7,000 times. She restated the claim in a tweet Monday afternoon to President Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani.

Brady, the Floyd election official, said he couldn’t tell from informatio­n available Monday if Perry Greene had actually been sent an absentee ballot or if it was a data entry error, but either way, the pollworker followed the correct procedure by cancelling that applicatio­n, asking the voter to sign an affidavit and then providing a fresh ballot.

St ate records show that in- person ballot was accepted.

“Once this shows as him having cast a ballot, it wouldn’t matter ifwe got 25 more ballots from him. We are not going to take any more of them because we know there aren’t any more ballots in play,” Brady said.

When asked about Greene’s accusation, Brady was circumspec­t, but he noted that Greene has a history of making inflammato­ry accusation­s, including about the election.

“What’s happening here is Ms. Greene is making a mountain out of a molehill, and it’s something that literally thousands of other voters had to deal with,” hesaid. “There are reasonable logical explanatio­ns for this beyond the fact that there was some kind of nefarious action.”

Greene has emerged as a leading voice in Georgia for claims of fraud in the presidenti­al count. Her election in the deeply conservati­ve northwest Georgia district has concerned people in both parties both for her shoot- from- the- hip style and her history of repeating outlandish claims related to the QAnon conspiracy theory.

Greene and her staff were busy Monday setting up her new Washington office, but spokesman Nick Dyer said Perry Greene’s ballot was “under investigat­ion.”

“They are pursuing it through every avenue available through Rome and the secretary of state’s office,” he said.

On Monday, Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, a Republican, said on CNN he has not seen “any sort of credible examples” of fraud or irregulari­ties in the state.

While some may chalk up the claims to politics or the unusually pugilistic styles of Trump and Greene, wild accusation­s of election fraud are having real- world consequenc­es. Lastweek, Fulton County Elections Director Richard Barron said one of his workers was “in hiding” after a widely shared Twitter video accused the worker of crumpling up a ballot.

The state GOP made the video part of a formal complaint to Barron and a request that he investigat­e.

Barron said the worker was crumpling up written instructio­ns and that the paper in the video was much smaller than an absentee ballot. According to a statement from the county, the worker in question was using a cutting machine to open the outer envelope of absentee ballots, and that ballot extraction was done at another station.

“It’s been questioned whether the pollworker featured in the video was discarding one of those ballots. The answer is no, undeniably no,” Barron said Friday.

 ?? MIKE STEWART/ AP ?? Republican Congresswo­man- electMarjo­rie Taylor Greene of northwest Georgia applauds as State Rep. Vernon Jones speaks at a rally of Trumpsuppo­rters in Atlanta on Saturday.
MIKE STEWART/ AP Republican Congresswo­man- electMarjo­rie Taylor Greene of northwest Georgia applauds as State Rep. Vernon Jones speaks at a rally of Trumpsuppo­rters in Atlanta on Saturday.

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