The Guardian (USA)

Georgia lawmakers make it easier to challenge a voter’s registrati­on

- George Chidi in Atlanta

Georgia legislator­s changed state election laws in the midnight hours of Friday, widening the criteria to challenge a voter’s registrati­on, removing bar codes from printed ballots and increasing the documentat­ion local elections officials must produce to certify elections.

The proposals will take effect 1 July, assuming the Georgia governor, Brian Kemp, signs the legislatio­n into law.

Voting rights groups expressed their highest concern about how Senate Bill 189 potentiall­y expands challenges to voter registrati­ons. Conservati­ve advocates have been issuing largescale systematic challenges to voters – dozens or hundreds at a time in some districts, like Atlanta’s Fulton and DeKalb counties. Each challenge under existing law has to be considered on its individual merits under current law, which can exhaust the resources of local election officials, voting rights advocates argue.

“In past cycles, we have seen ordinary people who would come in and challenge hundreds of voters because of different lists,” said Andrea Young, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia. “In 2022 there was kind of sort of a gray area. Now with this, it is almost encouragin­g … really anti-democratic vigilantes to come in and challenge your right to be on the voting list.”

The legislatio­n defines new conditions under which a challenge to a voter’s registrati­on would have probable cause, including a subsequent registrati­on in another state or jurisdicti­on, using a different residence to obtain a homestead tax exemption, registrati­on at a nonresiden­tial address. Challenges would not be permitted within 45 days of an election.

In the 2022 Senate election, questions dogged the Republican candidate, Herschel Walker, about his residency, after news reporters unearthed his Texas homestead exemption.

The legislatio­n also bars the use of post office boxes as a mailing address for a voting registrati­on. Notably, some small towns in Georgia, like Pine Lake in DeKalb county, have too few residents in their zip code for the post office to deliver mail to home addresses, necessitat­ing the use of post office boxes for its residents.

The bill requires people experienci­ng homelessne­ss to use the county registrar’s office as a mailing address to register to vote, a move that anti-homelessne­ss advocates argued would complicate the lives of both the homeless and of county registrars. Requiring homeless voters to register at an elections office may also violate the National Voter Registrati­on Act, advocates said.

“What we’re saying is that it should be easy for every citizen to vote,” Young said. “That’s what makes this a democracy. And all of these tricks to try to

create barriers for Georgia citizens to have a voice in their government is antidemocr­acy.”

The legislatio­n passed largely along a Republican party line vote despite objections raised by Georgia’s Republican secretary of state, Brad Raffensper­ger, arguing that major changes to election law should not be made so close to the 2024 election.

“We know there is a national coordinate­d movement to challenge voters, to go and talk about how the voter lists are outdated and bloated,” said Kristin Nabors, state director for All Voting Is Local. “They’re just not. We have extremely clean voter rolls in Georgia. This is not a bill that we need, and particular­ly not in an election year.”

Senate Bill 189 also requires election officials to use the printed text on a ballot to count votes, rather than use bar code scanning tools built into current election processes. It additional­ly requires elections offices to tabulate absentee votes and advanced voting totals within one hour of polls closing on election day. It also requires every person who is in physical control of ballots or key elections equipment to sign a tracking document showing chain of custody and the use of tamper-proof containers.

“This quantifies the fact that as ballots move through the process, they are properly documented and properly controlled,” said state senator Max Burns, a sponsor of the bill.

Two Republican-appointed members of the Fulton county board of registrati­on and elections voted against certificat­ion of the March presidenti­al primary two weeks ago, citing their inability to access chain-of-custody documentat­ion ahead of the vote.

But opponents of the bill suggested that the chain of custody provision is a pretext meant to allow elections board members to reject future elections for technical defects without bearing on the actual vote tally.

Other changes include the removal of the secretary of state as an ex officio member of the state elections board, and to require officials to provide highresolu­tion copies of ballots.

 ?? ?? A voter prepares to cast their ballot in the presidenti­al primary election in Atlanta, Georgia, on 12 March. Photograph: Alex Slitz/EPA
A voter prepares to cast their ballot in the presidenti­al primary election in Atlanta, Georgia, on 12 March. Photograph: Alex Slitz/EPA

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