The Mercury News

Get ready, Georgia: More election drama expected

- By Mark Niesse and Greg Bluestein

ATLANTA >> Georgia’s extraordin­arily thin partisan divide set the stage for rampant misinforma­tion, lawsuits and fights over election integrity after the presidenti­al election.

With control of the Senate on the line Jan. 5, elections officials are bracing for a new round of drama, especially if the races are as close as polls, analysts and the campaigns suggest they will be.

President Donald Trump has warred with state leaders and elections officials for weeks following his narrow defeat, even though flipping Georgia wouldn’t be enough to reverse Joe Biden’s White House victory.

Imagine, though, an equally tight margin in the twin runoffs, which have attracted unpreceden­ted spending and attention with the fate of Biden’s legislativ­e agenda at stake. Gabriel Sterling, the state’s voting system manager, is preparing for such a drawnout scenario.

“Even if there’s a blowout election, I think we’ll have people saying: ‘ Well, obviously it was stolen. We have close elections in this state,’” Sterling said. “So no matter what direction you go, that’s going to happen.”

He’s not alone. The Atlanta Journal- Constituti­on interviewe­d more than a dozen state officials, voting rights experts and party leaders who are quietly gearing up for a tortured election aftermath even while the U. S. Senate runoff campaigns are in full swing.

Their message: Brace yourselves, Georgia voters. These races might not be settled for weeks.

Once again, there could be tedious recounts. No matter who wins, the losing party could follow the example of the Trump campaign and his allies, who demanded and received statewide recounts both by hand and by machine. All three counts showed Trump lost by roughly 12,000 votes.

Once again, there could be drawn- out legal battles that seek to challenge the election results, restrict counting of certain ballots and allow others to be tallied.

Once again, there could be an unwavering stream of misinforma­tion infecting the social discourse, requiring elections officials, voting rights groups and the news media to work overtime to play Whac-a-mole with falsehoods that spread virally on social media.

And once again, officials are preparing for the threat of violence after the election; no idle concern after this chaotic campaign season. Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger required a security detail after he and his wife received death threats; some low- level county elections workers targeted by conspiracy theorists had to go into hiding.

It’s one reason why Gov. Brian Kemp, who has been targeted by malicious proTrump conspiracy theorists, delivered an impassione­d call against the hatefilled falsehoods spread about Georgia’s election.

“This needs to stop,” Kemp said. “People need to deal with facts. And we’ll give them to them.”

A breakdown in trust

Years of false claims about the vote have undermined the public’s faith in the electoral system.

That distrust only increased in the wake of the November election, particular­ly among Republican­s who can’t believe Trump lost. Just 24% of Republican­s nationally trusted that the results of the election were accurate, according to an NPR/PBS Newshour/ Marist poll this month.

Though state and federal elections officials have repeatedly said there’s no indication of widespread fraud, that hasn’t stopped suspicions about Georgia’s voting machines and absentee ballot system. Trump has stoked the claims and sent conflictin­g messages to Republican­s ahead of the runoffs by urging them to vote in a “rigged” election.

“Given what happened after the presidenti­al election, I wouldn’t at all be surprised to see attempts to challenge the results, especially if Democrats win,” Emory University political scientist Alan Abramowitz said. “We’re already seeing questions about signature verificati­on, challenges of new voter registrati­on. This could all just be a glimpse of the future.”

A spate of legal action in the weeks following the November election also increased the likelihood that ballots will be challenged after election day. A federal judge rejected a lawsuit filed by U.S. Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue seeking to segregate ballots cast by newly registered voters in the runoff, but it could hint at more legal action to come.

As in the presidenti­al election, when a series of lawsuits tried to stop the certificat­ion of election results and disqualify ballots, losing political candidates and parties could ask judges to intervene.

Outside the courts, challenges to ballots in the runoff have already begun. The Texas-based group True the Vote is contesting the residency of voters across the state, which could result in their ballots being rejected.

In Forsyth and Muscogee counties, local election boards have agreed to consider whether to count those ballots. Some of those decisions could come after election day. Most other county election boards have found there isn’t probable cause to move forward with the challenges.

“We’re seeing how badly the system can break down,” said state Rep. Josh Mclaurin, a Democrat from Sandy Springs. “There’s a real concern that a large portion of Georgia voters fundamenta­lly won’t accept that either Joe Biden is president or if Democrats win the runoffs, that Democrats control the Senate.”

There’s also the risk of armed protests, disruption­s to people waiting in line to vote and misinforma­tion about voting. Peter Koutoujian, sheriff of Middlesex County in Massachuse­tts and the president of the Major County Sheriffs of America, said law enforcemen­t officials must be particular­ly vigilant these next two weeks.

“These threats and intimidati­on have no place in our democracy, whether they are to election workers or to voters,” he said. “They’re especially pernicious when there’s an active election underway.”

Mudslingin­g

Experts said Georgians should also keep in mind the mechanics of the election system, which drew extraordin­ary scrutiny after Biden’s narrow victory came under repeated attack from Trump.

Absentee ballots might not be counted until late at night or after election day, especially in large counties that tend to lean Democratic.

The prolonged process fueled suspicions about the accuracy of the tally in the presidenti­al race, in part because the initial results favored Republican­s but shifted sharply as mail-in ballots were counted, and the same concerns could arise again in the runoffs.

If the outcome is within one-half a percentage point, the losing candidate has a right under Georgia law to a full statewide recount upon request. That kind of recount, conducted by reinsertin­g ballots through scanning machines, would occur after the election is certified by Jan. 22.

There’s also the possibilit­y of another recount, this one by hand, as was done in the presidenti­al race to confirm the outcome. State election officials have said they don’t know yet whether they’ll conduct that kind of manual audit after the runoffs.

And there will be an intense effort to cure absentee and provisiona­l ballots when election workers couldn’t verify the identity or registrati­on of voters. State law requires election officials to quickly notify voters about problems and give them until three days after election day to provide photo ID or other documentat­ion.

“We are anticipati­ng that if there’s a similarly contested per iod af ter the election, it’s going to be incredibly impor tant to make sure voters k now how thei r ba l lots are counted a nd to ensure they k now how to advocate for themselves,” said Lauren Groh-wargo, chief executive of the Fair Fight voting rights group.

It will all unfold in a precarious time: The runoff is the day before Congress counts Electoral College votes, a contentiou­s event where Republican­s have said they will formally challenge Biden’s victory. The Senate races could remain unsettled during Trump’s final days in office.

Even as officials prepare for the election, state GOP leaders are also bracing for a legislativ­e fight over the future of absentee voting. Raffensper­ger has said he wants to end no- excuse absentee voting, and he has also raised the possibilit­y of more intense investigat­ions of newly registered voters.

“This is a Georgia election run by Georgia election officials for Georgia voters to elect Georgia senators,” Raffensper­ger said. “We continue to investigat­e potential out-of-state voters and are taking steps to assure nonresiden­ts’ votes are not cast.”

 ?? DUSTIN CHAMBERS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? From left: Republican Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue with Ivanka Trump at a campaign event in Milton, Ga., on Monday.
DUSTIN CHAMBERS — THE NEW YORK TIMES From left: Republican Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue with Ivanka Trump at a campaign event in Milton, Ga., on Monday.
 ?? AUDRA MELTON — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, left, campaigns for Democratic Senate candidates the Rev. Raphael Warnock, center and Jon Ossoff at a rally on Monday in Columbus, Ga.
AUDRA MELTON — THE NEW YORK TIMES Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, left, campaigns for Democratic Senate candidates the Rev. Raphael Warnock, center and Jon Ossoff at a rally on Monday in Columbus, Ga.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States