The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

We need to maintain voting rights

Republican­s’ bills address voters’ access, not their confidence.

- By Elena Parent State Sen. Elena Parent, D-atlanta, represents District 42.

In March of 2019, Georgia was considerin­g a $100 million taxpayer-funded investment in a new voting system that would be used for the next decade, if not longer. Following the 2018 midterm elections, our state had to confront the inadequacy of our 20-year-old voting machines that did not allow for a hand recount, among other things.

My position — that handmarked paper ballots with optical scanners were the best choice — was supported by state and national experts, including then-secretary of State Brian Kemp’s own hand-picked cybersecur­ity expert, Dr. Wenke Lee.

My opposition to Georgia’s decision to purchase a wildly expensive new voting system, against the advice of experts, has not changed. And I would welcome the opportunit­y to work across the aisle to improve transparen­cy and security in the system that my Republican colleagues vociferous­ly supported, defended and voted for in 2019.

Until 2020, Georgia Republican­s had won every presidenti­al election since 1996, and have controlled all three branches of the state government since 2005. The laws and processes that govern our elections were devised and championed by the same Republican­s who hold positions of power in our government to this day.

That these Republican­s have realized that the process they created could be improved is a positive developmen­t. The motives behind this shift, however, are transparen­tly insincere

and opportunis­tic. Democrats will not have words, out of context, twisted to support a new narrative.

There was no widespread fraud in Georgia’s recent elections. Three recounts, including a hand recount, demonstrat­ed that definitive­ly. Georgia voters made their voices heard in November, and again in January. Now, the Georgia Republican Party is doing everything in its power to maintain its grip on state government.

My position has not changed. I remain steadfast in my belief that voter confidence is paramount. The problem is,

the legislativ­e steps Georgia Republican­s have taken do not address voter confidence, but rather voter access.

If the GOP was truly concerned about confidence, they would be moving to create a more transparen­t process. Steps we could take include sponsoring voter education and outreach, requiring audits of any races that go into a recount, eliminatin­g QR codes on ballots and moving to OCR technology, and offering handmarked paper ballots to in-person voters.

On the contrary, the steps Republican­s have taken are

laser-focused on restrictin­g access to the ballot box and making it more difficult for the people of our state to make their voices heard. They continue to trot out discredite­d and disproven accusation­s of voter fraud to justify these steps, thereby further underminin­g voter confidence in a cynical attempt to make it easier to reject and overturn the next electoral outcome that does not go in their favor.

Public trust cannot and will not be restored in our election system by striking at the very heart of democracy — by chipping away at what the word

“democracy” means and who it includes. In 2020, Georgia voters participat­ed in the electoral process in record-breaking numbers. In large part, their turnout was due to both the legislatur­e and federal courts recognizin­g and then dismantlin­g barriers to the ballot box after the 2018 elections.

Rather than changing their platform in order to persuade voters with the power of their ideas, Georgia Republican­s are now trying to change the electorate.

 ?? JOHN SPINK/JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? Georgia voters participat­ed in the electoral process in record-breaking numbers in 2020. Now, after losing in key national races, rather than changing their platform to persuade voters with ideas, Republican­s appear to be trying to change the electorate.
JOHN SPINK/JSPINK@AJC.COM Georgia voters participat­ed in the electoral process in record-breaking numbers in 2020. Now, after losing in key national races, rather than changing their platform to persuade voters with ideas, Republican­s appear to be trying to change the electorate.
 ??  ?? Elena Parent
Elena Parent

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