The Columbus Dispatch

Ga. GOP battles one of its own

Elections chief targeted after Biden carries state

- Jeff Amy

ATLANTA – Georgia’s secretary of state is a man on an island, and the political flood is rising fast as President Donald Trump and his allies vent their outrage at the fellow Republican and make unsupporte­d claims that mismanagem­ent and fraud tainted the state’s presidenti­al election.

Trump spent the weekend attacking Brad Raffensperger on social media, at one point calling him “a so-called Republican (RINO),” short for “Republican in name only.” Raffensperger punched back, disputing Trump’s claims that he made it easier for Democrats to cheat using mail-in ballots.

The secretary also called U.S. Rep. Doug Collins, who is running Trump’s Georgia recount effort, a “liar,” and says South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham called him in an apparent effort to pressure him to improperly discard ballots. Graham dismissed the allegation as “ridiculous.”

The current battle is a switch for Raffensper­ger. The 65-year-old, bespectacl­ed engineer spent most of his first two years in office taking abuse from Democrats, who filed lawsuits alleging that Georgia, under then-secretary of State Brian Kemp, engaged in illegal voter suppressio­n in 2018. Kemp, the Republican candidate who narrowly won the governorsh­ip over Democrat Stacey Abrams that year, denies the claims.

Also left in Raffensperger’s lap was a breakneck race to replace Georgia’s outdated voting machines in time for 2020 – an undertakin­g complicate­d in its closing stretch by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Through it all, Raffensperger – currently in quarantine after his wife tested positive for COVID-19 – has insisted he’s an impartial administra­tor of Georgia elections with no desire or agenda to sway the outcome.

Trump and his allies claimed Raffensperger didn’t do enough to root out “illegal” votes.

“The secretary of state has failed to deliver honest and transparen­t elections,” GOP Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler – both of whom failed to win enough votes to avoid January runoffs with their Democratic opponents – said last week, without offering any evidence to back up their assertion. “He has failed the people of Georgia, and he should step down immediatel­y.”

Collins, responding to Raffensperger’s “liar” label, fired back Monday on Twitter: “In a year of political division in Georgia, few things have unified Republican­s and Democrats – one of them is Brad Raffensperger’s incompeten­ce as Secretary of State.”

Raffensperger has sought to weather the beating by appeasing Trump supporters. After the Trump campaign asked for a hand recount of all 5 million votes cast in Georgia, Raffensperger chose the presidenti­al election for an audit, which Georgia law now requires for one statewide race each election cycle. The law envisioned just a sample of these votes to be checked in a hand count. But because the margin in the presidenti­al race is so narrow, Raffesnperger said hand-counting all the ballots that were legally cast is the only way to provide confidence in the result.

Raffensperger has said publicly that he wished Trump had won. But he’s also held firm in saying that he has seen no evidence of widespread fraud or voting irregulari­ties – and that he expects Biden’s 14,000-vote lead to hold up once the audit is complete.

“We knew that it was a silly argument,” Raffensperger said of the fraud allegation­s in an interview Monday with WDUN-AM radio in Gainesvill­e, Georgia. “But the hand recount puts that to bed.”

The elections chief has largely been left to fight on his own.

The state’s eight GOP U.S. House members have demanded – again without citing any evidence – that the secretary of state investigat­e Trump’s claims. Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan and state House Speaker David Ralston are exceptions: They’ve joined Kemp in pushing investigat­ions, but have stopped short of attacking Raffensperger.

A few Republican­s have even publicly supported him.

“From the standpoint of what I’ve seen, there just is no widespread fraud in the election process leading up to the general election,” said Saxby Chambliss, a Georgia Republican who served two terms in the U.S. Senate.

Georgia has seen years of contention over voting that predate Abrams’ loss. While Republican­s have newly labeled Raffensperger as an enemy, some Democrats find themselves partially mollified.

“I think on the whole he responded very well to changing the operations of the election to accommodat­e the pandemic,” said David Worley, a former Georgia Democratic Party chairman who now serves on the state elections board. Worley said Raffensperger has been a better manager and less partisan than Kemp was as secretary of state.

Before winning statewide office, Raffensper­ger made a fortune in engineerin­g and won election in 2011 to the city council in the affluent Atlanta suburb of Johns Creek.

“There’s no hidden agenda,” said Ivan Figueroa, who served on the council with Raffensperger. “He speaks his mind straight. You can trust what he says.”

In 2014, Raffensperger won election to the state legislatur­e. In 2018, when Kemp opted to run for governor, Raffensperger successful­ly ran to replace him, defeating Democratic U.S. Rep. John Barrow.

Last December, Raffensperger angered Democrats still smarting over Abrams’ loss by purging more than 300,000 voters under a Georgia law that removes residents from the rolls if they don’t vote in a seven-year period or respond to contacts. A new law will extend the deadline to nine years.

Raffensperger’s biggest task has been to roll out a new voting system purchased from Dominion Voting Systems that cost more than $100 million. Dominion has been the target of unsupporte­d conspiracy claims spread by Trump and his supporters in recent days.

The new equipment got a rocky rollout during a June primary that was blemished by hourslong waits, in part because the COVID-19 pandemic shrunk the number of polling places and workers.

November’s vote was smoother, with most people voting before Election Day after Raffensperger set up an online system for requesting mail-in ballots.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON/AP ?? Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger has few supporters among his fellow Republican­s.
BRYNN ANDERSON/AP Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger has few supporters among his fellow Republican­s.

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