The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Vote-suppressio­n efforts don’t reflect well on today’s Ga.

- By Timothy McDonald III and Ben Jealous The Rev. Timothy McDonald III is senior pastor of First Iconium Baptist Church in Atlanta. Ben Jealous is president of People For the American Way.

A new Georgia is rising, and the old Georgia is rearing its ugly head.

In response to robust voter turnout in the 2020 elections, especially among Black voters, Republican­s in the Statehouse are saying, “Not so fast.” They are trying to rush a shameful bill to restrict voting and limit voter participat­ion through the Legislatur­e with little notice and little time for the public to respond. They are specifical­ly targeting Black voters.

HB 531, as initially drafted, would have made it illegal to hold early voting on Sundays. A key House committee struck that provision a few days ago. Is there any legitimate public

policy reason to ban early voting on Sundays? Of course not. That provision takes direct aim at Black churches’ traditiona­l “souls to the polls” voter mobilizati­on efforts.

When North Carolina’s Republican­s passed a similar law a few years ago, a federal court ruled that the state’s move to shut down Sunday voting because counties that used it were disproport­ionately Black was “as close to a smoking gun as we are likely to see in modern times” that the law was aimed at disenfranc­hising Black voters.

HB 531 would also shrink the period in which voters could request absentee ballots and limit the time that counties could send ballots out. It would impose new ID requiremen­ts for absentee ballots. Another section targets mobile voting facilities, targeting Fulton County’s efforts to make voting more accessible with the use of voting buses.

The bill’s restrictio­ns on early voting would make it harder for people who don’t have the flexibilit­y to leave work to vote, and it would fall harder on heavily populated metro areas than on rural areas with much smaller numbers of voters.

The bill descends into cruelty by banning people from giving food or water to voters waiting in long lines at polling places. Think of it as the criminaliz­ation of kindness. And just one more shameful way to discourage people from voting.

This bill was dropped on Georgians as a last-minute surprise. But these provisions didn’t come out of nowhere. There is a nationwide push by right-wing organizati­ons responding to the defeat of Donald Trump by urging Republican legislator­s to impose new voting restrictio­ns. It is part of a long-term strategy for the shrinking Republican Party and its white conservati­ve base to hang on to power as a new multiracia­l, multiethni­c majority is emerging.

Public officials should welcome energetic civic participat­ion. But Republican­s in the Statehouse were not happy with the results of the last election, so they are returning to a triedand-true method to hang on to power. They are simply trying to make it harder for people to turn out the next time.

That tells us all we need to know about their commitment to democracy.

It tells us that they are willing to resist the emergence of a Georgia that reflects the values of John Lewis by resorting to the shameful tactics of Jim Crow.

 ??  ?? McDonald III
McDonald III
 ??  ?? Jealous
Jealous

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