The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Voting proposals show parties’ widening gap

- Jamie Dupree Washington Insider Jamie Dupree has covered national politics and the Congress from Washington since the Reagan administra­tion. His column appears weekly in The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on. For more, check out his Capitol Hill newsletter at

As Dems in Congress try to widen voters’ options, several Gop-led states aim to squeeze the options, columnist Jamie Dupree says.

We don’t usually see the same subject debated at the same time in the Georgia Legislatur­e and the U.S. Congress, but that’s where we were this week, as Republican­s and Democrats head in dramatical­ly different directions when it comes to election laws.

For Democrats, the goal of a major election bill in Congress is to give voters broader options to cast absentee ballots, to vote by mail or to have more days to vote early in person.

In a number of GOPled states, the answer is squeezing those options: limiting those eligible to cast an absentee ballot or to vote by mail, shrinking the availabili­ty of early in-person voting days and even — in the state of Iowa — cutting back on voting hours at the polls on Election Day.

“The most reprehensi­ble of all efforts might be found in Georgia,” said U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer, who called GOP efforts to cut back on Sunday early voting in Georgia “pernicious,” while others used words like “draconian.”

“I am not worried about the administra­tors in Georgia,” said U.S. Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-calif. “I am worried about the Legislatur­e in Georgia.”

“Every voice must be heard, and every vote must be counted,” said U.S. Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux, D-SUwanee.

Republican­s continued to speak ominously of a 2020 election that they claim was rife with fraud and election misdeeds, though just like former President Donald Trump, they don’t produce much in the way of detail.

For example, one Georgia Republican, former U.S. Sen. David Perdue, spoke this week in a television interview about “imbalances” in the state’s 2020 elections, a result that was checked repeatedly by audits and recounts.

“The worst thing in the world that can happen is for the federal government to nationaliz­e our election system,” U.S. Rep. Jody Hice, R-greensboro, said as state Republican­s denounced the election bill in Congress.

“This bill will weaken what many states are doing to improve election security,” said U.S. Rep. Buddy Carter, R-pooler.

To Democrats, the phrase “election security” is nothing more than code for Republican­s in Georgia and other states trying to limit voting opportunit­ies.

Meanwhile, one U.S. Supreme Court justice was thinking about Georgia as well.

“If a state cancels Sunday early voting, and Black people vote on Sunday 10 times more than white voters, is that legal under the Voting Rights Act?” Justice Elena Kagan asked during arguments over a major voting rights case.

The answer from a lawyer from the Republican National Committee was “yes,” that it is legal to shut off Sunday early voting.

“We need to pass the For the People Act to ensure every American can cast their ballot,” said U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-GA.

The difference­s are stark. And the fight over election laws is not going away in Georgia, on Capitol Hill or in the courts.

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 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP ?? For Democrats, the goal of a major election bill in Congress is to widen voters’ options. In a number of Gop-led states, the answer is squeezing those options.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP For Democrats, the goal of a major election bill in Congress is to widen voters’ options. In a number of Gop-led states, the answer is squeezing those options.

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