The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. GOP candidate: No more drop boxes

Miller files legislatio­n that would eliminate popular election tool.

- By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com

Lieutenant governor candidate and state Senate President Pro Tempore Butch Miller filed legislatio­n Monday to eliminate election drop boxes made popular by Georgians trying to avoid having to vote in person during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In a press release, sent by the Senate Press Office, Miller, who is facing an opponent endorsed by former President Donald Trump, called the banning of drop boxes the “next step in our fight to restore Georgians’ faith in our election systems.”

“Drop boxes were introduced as an emergency measure during the pandemic, but many counties did not follow the security guidelines in place, such as the requiremen­t for camera surveillan­ce on every drop box,” Miller said in the release. “Moving forward, we can return to a pre-pandemic normal of voting in person. Removing drop boxes will help rebuild the trust that has been lost.”

Former President Donald Trump and his supporters have for a year promoted false claims that the 2020 election — which Trump lost — was stolen. Since then, they have pushed for changes in election laws “to restore confidence in elections” without acknowledg­ing their own role in diminishin­g confidence in elections.

State election officials have said there was no indication of fraud in 2020 after three ballot counts and multiple investigat­ions. In last year’s presidenti­al election, Democrat Joe Biden defeated Trump in Georgia by about 12,000 votes.

Earlier this year, the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e approved an overhaul of the state’s voting laws that regulate the use of ballot drop boxes — a practice brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic and approved by the Republican-led State Election Board last year to accommodat­e a surge in absentee voting during the 2020 elections.

Miller voted for the overhaul. But now he faces state Sen. Burt Jones, a Jackson Republican who was endorsed by Trump, in the GOP lieutenant governor primary.

Georgia’s new voting law allows the drop boxes with tight restrictio­ns: They must be located inside early voting sites, available only during in-person voting hours, and shut down when early voting ends the Friday before an election.

Every county is required to install at least one drop box, but no more than one for every 100,000 active registered voters.

Miller’s proposal, Senate Bill 325, would remove the use of election drop boxes completely.

An analysis of election data from the secretary of state’s office by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on and Georgia Public Broadcasti­ng found that ballot drop boxes saw heavy usage in mostly Democratic metro Atlanta counties during their rollout last year, far more than in rural Republican areas of Georgia.

Democratic Party of Georgia Executive Director Scott Hogan called Miller’s latest proposal an “attack on absentee voting.”

“Butch Miller’s proposal to blow up our elections based on lies is part of his sad, desperate attempt to win over far-right voters after Donald Trump endorsed his primary opponent,” Hogan said. “We already know Butch Miller is terrified of Georgia’s diversifyi­ng electorate — now, he’s trying to silence the voters of color who elected Democrats last cycle by banning one of the most popular ways they chose to cast their ballots.”

The proposed legislatio­n is the latest in a string of partisan moves made by Miller, a Gainesvill­e Republican, and announced by the taxpayer-funded Senate Press Office while he still holds his leadership role as the chamber’s second in command. Senate rules don’t require a president pro tem to step down if he or she is seeking higher office, and Miller has said he does not plan to relinquish his leadership role.

Last month, Miller filed legislatio­n that would eliminate the state income tax — which brings in more than half of all revenue for K-12 schools, colleges, public health, criminal investigat­ions, prisons and mental health programs. His legislatio­n doesn’t say how the state would replace the $14 billion in annual lost revenue.

 ?? NATHAN POSNER FOR THE AJC ?? State Sen. Butch Miller, a Gainesvill­e Republican who is Senate president pro tem, is running for lieutenant governor in 2022.
NATHAN POSNER FOR THE AJC State Sen. Butch Miller, a Gainesvill­e Republican who is Senate president pro tem, is running for lieutenant governor in 2022.

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