The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Our democracy is threatened. Let’s act like it.

Georgia should join other states and protect our election workers.

- By Peter Simmons

Georgia is the country’s foremost producer of peanuts. So for a moment, let’s make it about peanuts.

It’s Nov. 5, 2024, and your favorite cousin, a customer service rep at the neighborho­od peanut retailer, has done an excellent job assisting customers, ensuring transactio­ns were fair and legitimate and helping the peanut economy run smoothly.

Walking to the car after work, however, people harass your cousin and shout vile obscenitie­s. Your cousin gets doxed — private, personal informatio­n gets accessed and made public, people start calling the house, threatenin­g your

cousin’s life.

Why? People have been told your cousin is responsibl­e for what will be skyrocketi­ng peanut prices. Never mind this is untrue, and your cousin has absolutely nothing to do with peanut prices and was merely doing their job.

Of course, to be clear, no such problems plague Georgia’s peanut industry or its employees. Yet, as we approach the Nov. 5, 2024, election, this is the reality for poll workers and election officials at the heart of our very democracy.

For years, Georgians faced historic and unpreceden­ted challenges at the polls. It was only through the challengin­g work of dedicated election workers and community activists that we have begun to experience shorter wait times and positive voting experience­s,

especially in previously neglected communitie­s across the state.

However, these same dutiful poll workers have faced and continue to face unwarrante­d aggression because of the lies being told to their communitie­s.

Just last month, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported that a member of Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger’s office was among those targeted with the kind of “swatting” directed at politician­s and poll workers throughout Georgia and across the nation.

“My family has now joined the ranks of those who have had their home swatted,” Gabriel Sterling, Raffensper­ger’s chief operating officer, posted on X, formerly called Twitter. “We should all refuse to allow bomb threats and swatting to be the new normal.”

Without the friends, family and neighbors who choose to serve as election officials at all levels, Georgians would face a return to more dysfunctio­nal elections and to increased challenges in voting, both of which have been all too common throughout our state’s history.

The Brennan Center 2023 survey of nearly 11,000 local election officials shows 21% have considered departing before the November election, 30% report being personally abused, harassed or threatened and nearly 3 in 4 believe threats have increased recently.

Fortunatel­y, a bipartisan coalition of lawmakers in the Georgia General Assembly agrees with nearly 75% of Americans that election workers should be better protected.

Several possible policy solutions have been adopted across the country. These include privacy

protection­s; prohibitio­ns against intimidati­on, threats and harassment; civil causes of action for victims; adequate funding and training to support the security of election officials; and the collection of and increased access to data about threats to election officials.

States are seeing bipartisan support. Arizona’s Republican-controlled Legislatur­e passed a law the Democratic governor signed, which enables election officials to request their identifiab­le personal informatio­n be kept confidenti­al to prevent doxing. In Nevada, the Democratic secretary of state championed a bill that makes threatenin­g or doxing election officials illegal. This bill passed unanimousl­y and was signed by the state’s Republican governor in May.

Thanks to legislator­s in Minnesota, there are now comprehens­ive protection­s for election officials, including new grounds for them to pursue civil remedies related to the intimidati­on of election workers. Similarly, Republican states like Oklahoma recently passed laws protecting election officials.

Whether the states are red, blue or purple, legislatur­es have recognized that protecting those who safeguard our elections is not “political,” but patriotic and fundamenta­l to our democracy.

After considerab­le hard work, analysis and deliberati­on, a bipartisan bill has emerged for a committee vote in the Georgia General Assembly. House Bill 1118 employs three of the most common solutions, including limiting opportunit­ies for anti-democratic actors to threaten these officials by restrictin­g access to their personal informatio­n and expanding existing protection­s against violence, threats and interferen­ce to cover all election officials without unnecessar­ily increasing existing criminal penalties. And the bill creates a mechanism for reporting violations of existing law and collecting informatio­n concerning threats, thereby allowing our state’s policymake­rs to calibrate their policy solutions to be responsive to the concrete, available data.

It’s time for Georgia to join the growing list of states that have come together on common-sense protection­s for election officials and pass HB 1118 into law.

This ain’t about hypothetic­al peanut problems, it’s about real and dire threats to our democracy. And we need to act like it.

 ?? JOHN SPINK/AJC ?? Poll workers have faced and continue to face unwarrante­d aggression because of the lies being told to their communitie­s, a policy strategist for Protect Democracy writes. A bipartisan bill that has emerged for a committee vote in the Georgia General Assembly is intended to provide some needed protection­s for the state’s election workers.
JOHN SPINK/AJC Poll workers have faced and continue to face unwarrante­d aggression because of the lies being told to their communitie­s, a policy strategist for Protect Democracy writes. A bipartisan bill that has emerged for a committee vote in the Georgia General Assembly is intended to provide some needed protection­s for the state’s election workers.
 ?? ?? Peter Simmons
Peter Simmons

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