The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

With no co-sponsors from GOP, proposal’s prospects uncertain.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

‘While others around the country are sitting down for Thanksgivi­ng turkey with their families and planning their winter holidays, Georgians are subjected to a barrage of increasing­ly negative campaign commercial­s and mailers.’

Atlanta Democrat who introduced bill

Runoffs would be eliminated after Georgia general elections as long as a candi- date wins at least 45% of the vote, according to a Demo- cratic-sponsored bill filed Wednesday.

It’s the first proposal intro- duced this year to do away with runoffs after U.S. Sen- ate races went into overtime both last year and in 2020. Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock swept those three runoffs.

The legislatio­n, House Bill 419, would end Georgia’s requiremen­t for run- offs when no candidate wins a majority in general elec- tions featuring Democratic, Libertaria­n and Republican candidates.

Instead, candidates would be elected if they receive a plurality of votes cast, which is similar to how most states decide elections.

Georgia is one of three states, along with Louisiana and Mississipp­i, that mandate runoffs after general elections when no candidate receives at least 50% of the vote. No other state requires runoffs after both primary and general elections.

“Georgians are tired of runoffs extending the campaign cycle into December,” said state Rep. Saira Draper, a Democrat from Atlanta who introduced the bill. “While others around the country are sitting down for Thanks- giving turkey with their fam- ilies and planning their winter holidays, Georgians are subjected to a barrage of increasing­ly negative campaign commercial­s and mail- ers. It’s time to reform our system.”

Without any co-sponsors from the Republican major- ity in the General Assem- bly, the bill’s prospects are uncertain.

Democrats have won recent runoffs in Georgia, but Republican­s dominated runoffs in previous years.

Republican leaders in the General Assembly have said they’d consider ideas to eliminate runoffs but hadn’t decided whether they’d support a change.

The proposed plurality-wins system would reverse the majority requiremen­t approved by Republican­s in 2005 after they took control of the General Assembly.

A poll by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on in January found that 58% of people surveyed supported eliminatin­g general election runoffs by declaring whichever candidate receives the most votes the winner.

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Rep. Saira Draper,

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