The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Judge rules against much of 2018 voting lawsuit

Many of the claims in the suit by Abrams’ Fair Fight group were tossed out.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

After the heated 2018 race for Georgia governor, a broad voting rights lawsuit tried to make fundamenta­l changes to elections, taking on voter registrati­on purges, ballot cancellati­ons and long lines.

But a recent court ruling scaled back the suit by Fair Fight, a voting organizati­on that Democrat Stacey Abrams founded after her loss to Republican Brian Kemp in the governor’s race.

U.S. District Judge Steve Jones last week threw out many of Fair Fight’s claims, ruling against challenges to registrati­on cancellati­ons, too few voting machines, inadequate poll worker training and ballot rejections.

What’s left are narrow allegation­s about Georgia’s “exact match” voter registrati­on policy, voter list accuracy and absentee ballot cancellati­ons.

“This trial will be a shadow of what the plaintiffs originally intended,” said Jason Torchinsky, a Washington-based Republican election attorney who is

familiar with the case. “These cases are very difficult to prove, and they often don’t prevail, or they don’t prevail to the extent they sought to.”

Jones granted the state’s request for summary judgment on large parts of the lawsuit, building on his February order that scaled down the case based on jurisdicti­onal issues. Jones’ latest ruling covered the merits of the case.

When the case goes to trial, Fair Fight will continue opposing election procedures that make it difficult to vote in Georgia, said Lauren Grohwargo, the organizati­on’s CEO.

“Our case stemming from 2018 is a demonstrat­ion that voter suppressio­n in Georgia has a long and shameful track record, and that the current attacks on voting rights are not new but part of a long pattern,” Groh-wargo said.

The lawsuit was filed three weeks after Election Day in 2018. Abrams didn’t concede but acknowledg­ed Kemp had won, saying she would fight policies that stood in the way of voters.

“What I liked about the original lawsuit was that it sought to argue that Georgia voting laws as a whole — looking at the complete package — made it more difficult than necessary for people to register and vote,” said Rick Hasen, a law professor at the University of California, Irvine, and the author of “Election Meltdown.” “That is a more sensible way to think about voting restrictio­ns than looking at the issue piecemeal.”

Part of Jones’ ruling rejected Fair Fight’s challenge to Georgia’s “use it or lose it” law, which cancels voter registrati­ons if potential voters don’t participat­e in elections for several years. Jones wrote that canceled voters aren’t significan­tly burdened because they can re-register to vote.

State election officials canceled about 534,000 Georgia voter registrati­ons in 2017 and 287,000 registrati­ons in 2019 because records showed the registrant­s had changed their addresses, mail was undelivera­ble or they didn’t vote for several years. The lawsuit alleged that some voters never moved and didn’t receive a notice before their registrati­ons were canceled.

“The court finds plaintiffs have not shown that the process is applied differentl­y to any class of voters,” Jones wrote.

The defendant in the case, Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, will demonstrat­e at trial that Abrams’ rhetoric about voter disenfranc­hisement wasn’t backed up by the facts, Deputy Secretary of State Jordan Fuchs said.

“Over two years later, the evidence is in, and it shows that her allegation­s of widespread and systemic voter suppressio­n were completely false,” Fuchs said.

Jones didn’t rule on a part of the lawsuit that alleges violations of the Voting Rights Act, which protects against racial discrimina­tion in elections. He wrote that he won’t decide on that issue until the U.S. Supreme Court rules on an Arizona voting rights case, Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee, involving provisiona­l ballots and ballot collection.

During a trial, possibly later this year, one of Fair Fight’s claims will focus on the state’s “exact match” policy, which prevented 53,000 Georgians who tried to sign up to vote from having their registrati­ons accepted before the 2018 election. Registrati­ons were placed in “pending” status for several reasons, including a missing hyphen, an extra space or the use of a nickname in official government records.

The case also includes allegation­s that election officials never received mailed absentee ballots, and then voters who checked online and saw that weren’t permitted to vote in person. Another count involves claims that voter registrati­on records were inaccurate, resulting in registered voters being unable to cast ballots.

The judge’s ruling doesn’t address Georgia’s new voting law passed March 25, which is also being contested in court.

Four lawsuits have been filed against the new measure, challengin­g limits on drop boxes, ID requiremen­ts for absentee voters, ballot request deadlines and a ban on volunteers handing out food and water to voters waiting in line.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Fair Fight CEO Lauren Groh-wargo, seen here speaking in 2018 after the suit was filed, said, “When the case goes to trial, Fair Fight will continue opposing election procedures that make it difficult to vote in Georgia.”
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Fair Fight CEO Lauren Groh-wargo, seen here speaking in 2018 after the suit was filed, said, “When the case goes to trial, Fair Fight will continue opposing election procedures that make it difficult to vote in Georgia.”
 ??  ?? U.S. District Judge Steve Jones
U.S. District Judge Steve Jones

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