The Standard Journal

Brad Raffensper­ger: There is no time to take QR codes off ballots this year

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA — There isn't time to remove QR codes from paper ballots in Georgia, as Republican legislativ­e leaders have proposed, before this year's elections, GOP Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger said Wednesday, Jan. 17.

“I would support moving to human-readable text,” Raffensper­ger said during the second day of legislativ­e hearings on Gov. Brian Kemp's budget recommenda­tions. “The challenge is getting it done for the 2024 election.”

The General Assembly passed legislatio­n in 2019 providing for a paper backup to electronic ballots, a move aimed at giving Georgians more confidence their votes are being recorded accurately. But some voters have complained that the QR codes that accompany paper ballots are confusing and impose a barrier on transparen­cy.

Georgia House Speaker Jon Burns, R-Newington, said last week House Republican­s will push to eliminate the QR codes. On the Senate side, Republican­s have been calling for eliminatin­g the QR codes since last fall.

“We've been talking about getting rid of the QR codes for a long time,” Sen. Brandon Beach, R-Alpharetta, a member of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee, told Raffensper­ger Wednesday. “Citizens do not trust the QR code.”

But Raffensper­ger said this year's elections are rapidly approachin­g, starting with the presidenti­al primaries in March and followed in short order by congressio­nal and legislativ­e primary elections in May.

“We're already into the election of 2024,” he said. “We're continuing with the system we have now.” Raffensper­ger is asking for more than $5.2 million in his fiscal 2025 budget request to begin the process of upgrading the state's voting equipment by installing new software in every voting machine in Georgia. However, that would require testing of the new equipment over six to nine months, he said.

The secretary also is looking to hire additional investigat­ors for the agency's Elections Division.

“Delays in investigat­ions can have a serious impact on some voters' confidence,” he said.

Senate Appropriat­ions Committee Chairman Blake Tillery, R-Vidalia, said getting rid of the QR codes would not require new legislatio­n.

“The No. 1 issue is the removal of the QR codes,” he said.

But Raffensper­ger said passing a new law isn't the issue.

“It's really the technology and having that available from the vendors,” he said.

Raffensper­ger defended the current system Georgia uses for elections, pointing to a poll conducted by the University of Georgia that found 90% of respondent­s expressed confidence in the integrity of the 2022 elections.

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