The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Georgia shows how bad voting can be

- Adrienne Jones Morehouse College The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

As the nation mourns civil rights icon John Lewis, a congressma­n and lifelong advocate of voting rights, the mayhem in his home state’s most recent election serves as another egregious example of how a citizen’s most sacred act in a democracy – voting – was undermined and even denied after a federal law protecting voters’ rights was abandoned by a 2013 Supreme Court ruling.

Georgia’s presidenti­al primary election on June 9 was a nightmare mix of inefficien­cy and discrimina­tion that shows how difficult it is for many Americans to participat­e in their democracy.

Hundreds of voters, many in majority Black areas, waited four, five and even seven hours to cast their ballots. Some even faced down police seeking to send them home without having voted.

I am a scholar who studies voting rights and voter suppressio­n. When I spoke to longtime Georgia voters throughout the day, each one of them remarked that they “had never seen an election like this in the state of Georgia.”

The state’s primary was an example of what should not happen in a democratic country. It is an experience that has implicatio­ns beyond Georgia, and that carries warnings for problems with the November presidenti­al election and the legitimacy of the results.

Georgia’s primary election was postponed twice from its original March 24 date.

A million and a half Georgians applied to get absentee ballots that would have let them vote by mail. But an unknown number of them never received their ballots and were forced to vote in person to ensure that their votes would be counted. Ultimately only 943,000 ballots were cast by mail.

Georgians didn’t always know where to go to vote: 10% of polling places – including 80 in the state’s most populous county alone – were closed because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The state-run website that let voters look up where they should vote was down for several hours in the morning and worked only intermitte­ntly throughout the day. When the site was running, some voters still could not find their correct polling locations and visited precincts where poll workers told them they couldn’t vote.

Experience­d poll workers were ill or feared getting sick, so the state had to recruit, train and dispatch new ones right before the election. Many poll workers were insufficie­ntly trained and uninformed, especially about when voters were entitled to absentee, emergency and provisiona­l ballots.

There weren’t enough polling places, either. Several sites that normally serve 2,000 to 3,000 voters had to accommodat­e as many as 10,000 because of the consolidat­ion.

Some polling places, especially in majority Black areas, had major delays because new voting machines weren’t working correctly. Many polling places across the state opened two and three hours late. The new systems, including printers, scanners and tablets, had trouble throughout the day, causing additional delays.

Precincts ran out of provisiona­l ballots and envelopes and printer paper. County government­s, the NAACP and other civil-rights groups appealed to county courts to get orders extending polling hours beyond the usual 7 p.m. to make up for the delays. One precinct didn’t close until 10:10 p.m.

As if that weren’t enough, it rained on voters in long lines with no shelter.

Early in the day, Brad Raffensper­ger, Georgia’s Republican secretary of state, blamed the mayhem on the counties, which administer the election, for not properly preparing for the state’s new electronic voting system. County officials responded that the state was the problem.

The state’s Republican leadership did nothing to prevent this disaster from happening, even though it had happened before, just two years ago.

In the 2018 election, Republican Brian Kemp, then Georgia’s secretary of state, was running for governor.

In 2017 Kemp purged more than half a million voters from the rolls under the state’s rule that voters who have not voted in two or more previous elections could be required to reregister before voting again. And he applied another rule that disqualifi­ed voters whose names in election rolls did not exactly match their identifica­tion documents.

In addition, for the 2018 election, Georgia had fewer polling places open than usual, reduced the availabili­ty of early voting and required proof of citizenshi­p before a person could register to vote.

Kemp’s efforts paid off. He won the election against Democrat Stacey Abrams by a nose in the closest governor’s race since 1966.

That narrow victory may have reinforced Georgia Republican­s’ fear, shared by President Donald Trump, that if it’s easier for people to vote, the GOP will lose more elections nationwide.

All these manipulati­ons and changes are legal. That’s because in 2013, the U.S. Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act, removing the provision that protected people’s right to vote free from discrimina­tion.

In their 5-4 Shelby County v. Holder decision, the justices removed the federal government’s power to evaluate, preapprove or block discrimina­tory voting laws in states like Georgia that have long histories of voter discrimina­tion.

With the Voting Rights Act gutted, other states may feel freer to suppress their citizens’ voting rights the way Georgia did. Voters across the nation may face similar circumstan­ces in their communitie­s – but there is still time for them to demand better from their officials.

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