The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

» Senate panel backs measures to end no-excuse absentee voting and automatic voter registrati­on,

Bills end automatic voter registrati­on, noexcuse absentee voting.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

A Senate committee passed voting restrictio­ns Friday that would end automatic voter registrati­on and no-excuse absentee voting in Georgia.

The Senate Ethics Committee voted mostly along party lines to advance the bills, which could reach the full Senate next week.

The voting limitation­s advanced Friday are the latest in a series of bills pushed by Republican legislator­s after record turnout led to Democrat Joe Biden’s victory over Republican Donald Trump. Other legislatio­n advancing in the General Assembly would add voter ID requiremen­ts for absentee voting, restrict ballot drop boxes and limit weekend early voting hours.

Georgia has been a national leader in automatic voter registrati­on since Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, who was secretary of the state at the time, implemente­d it in fall 2016. Since then, the state’s number of registered voters has increased by about 1.5 million, to a total of 7.7 million.

Under Senate Bill 69, voters wouldn’t be automatica­lly registered to vote when they get their driver’s licenses. They would have to check a box to sign up to vote.

State Sen. Sally Harrell, a Democrat from Atlanta, said Republican­s are trying to crack down on voting access because they lost the presidency and Georgia’s two U.S. Senate seats.

“Those are not reasons to radically change the voting laws that have worked so well for a long time, including the 2020 election,” Harrell said. “There’s no good reason to change all these policies. In other words, we’re fixing something that’s not broken.”

The sponsor of the bill, Rules Committee Chairman Jeff Mullis, said the state shouldn’t sign people up to vote by default.

“We believe that it’s important people have the ability to register to vote, and we believe just to assume that people need to vote might not be the right way,” said Mullis, a Republican from Chickamaug­a.

The measure ending no-excuse absentee voting, Senate Bill 71, would allow people to vote remotely only if they’re 65 or older, have a physical disability or are out of town.

A record 1.3 million people cast absentee ballots in the presidenti­al election out of a total of 5 million total voters.

The Senate Ethics Committee could vote Monday on a separate bill, Senate Bill 241, that includes similar limitation­s on no-excuse absentee voting, along with requiremen­ts for ID when voting absentee and restrictio­ns on drop boxes.

In addition, the full House is scheduled to vote Monday on House Bill 531, which would mandate absentee ID, reduce drop box availabili­ty, set earlier deadlines for requesting absentee ballots and disqualify ballots that are cast in the wrong precinct.

If these bills pass the Senate and House, they would then move to the other legislativ­e chamber for further debate, amendments and votes.

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