The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

No need to fix nonexisten­t problem

Georgia lawmakers considerin­g numerous bills that would make it harder to vote.

- The Editorial Board.

This year, Republican lawmakers in the Georgia General Assembly have introduced numerous bills to, quite simply, make it harder to vote.

Their proposed legislatio­n would limit absentee voting, require photo ID at additional points, restrict use of mobile polling places or ballot drop boxes and even ban the Southern hospitalit­y of offering food or drinks to people waiting in long poll lines.

In an apparent move to reduce the predictabl­e blowback against these new restrictio­ns, a Georgia House committee on Wednesday removed a proposed ban on Sunday early voting. That strategic nod seems intended to placate fans of the “souls to the polls” efforts by many to promote voting after religious services.

While it’s welcomed, removing one particular­ly bad idea from one deeply flawed bill doesn’t magically make the rest of the legislatio­n acceptable.

Especially when the bill seems part of a concerted campaign to make voting more difficult.

In spite of Wednesday’s actions, too many changes remain under considerat­ion.

Maintainin­g a robust and secure system that makes it easy for those who are eligible to vote is an important part of the American way. And a state that’s as important as Georgia should be supporting this key principle of democracy — not chipping away at it without good reason.

Let us not forget that every piece of evidence indicates that election integrity is not a significan­t problem here. To the contrary, this state’s election system seems sufficient­ly secure — a point made repeatedly by the Republican officehold­ers in charge of maintainin­g election security, namely Georgia’s secretary of state and governor.

None of this is to say there isn’t a problem here. There is. But it seems one of perception, fueled by falsehoods, especially by those who do, or should, know better.

Fewer than 60 days have passed since the then-president of the United States urged Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger to discount his defeat in a lawfully run election. To his great credit, Raffensper­ger stood his ground in the face of fiery criticism and unwarrante­d accusation­s of a “stolen” election.

The repetition or acceptance of untrue claims by some in power have, yes, shaken faith in the core citizen-held power that is the vote.

A poll conducted last month for the AJC by the University of Georgia found that 38% of voters believed there was significan­t fraud in last November’s presidenti­al election. Admittedly, some three-quarters of Republican voters surveyed thought fraud was a big factor in the election, versus 4% of Democratic respondent­s.

Enacting substantia­l changes to fix a problem that has not been proven to exist won’t do anything to bridge the partisan gulf that now stretches across Georgia.

It’s also worth noting that Georgia legislator­s have not asserted that the November vote totals, which also kept them in office at the Gold Dome, were somehow lacking in integrity. If Georgia’s election system truly is flawed, shouldn’t those election results likewise come into question?

They haven’t, and that speaks volumes.

The single-sentence mission statement of sorts for the House election integrity committee reads that maintainin­g “accessibil­ity” and “efficiency” of elections are part of what the latest fuss is all about.

Given that, we can’t see how further restrictin­g processes that seem to have worked well during a hard-fought election does anything but neuter those admirable goals.

 ?? JOHN SPINK/JOHN.SPINK@AJC.COM ?? The state of Georgia should be supporting a robust, secure and easy elections system.
JOHN SPINK/JOHN.SPINK@AJC.COM The state of Georgia should be supporting a robust, secure and easy elections system.

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