Walker County Messenger

Absentee ballot, long voter line changes pass Senate

- By Beau Evans Capitol Beat News Service

Georgia voters could see local precincts split into more than one location and gain new protection­s against their absentee ballots being tossed for faulty signatures under a bill that passed the Georgia Senate Thursday, March 15.

Senate Bill 463 would allow precincts that serve more than 2,000 voters or experience wait times of more than one hour to be split into smaller precincts for the next election cycle.

The Georgia Secretary of State’s office would further be tasked with determinin­g whether precincts should have more voting machines and booths in subsequent elections.

The bill would also prohibit absentee ballots from being rejected if they possess signatures that do not exactly match the signatures shown on a voter’s identifica­tion document like a driver’s license, voter ID card or employee card.

Sen. John Kennedy, the bill’s sponsor, said the changes aim to expand voter access in Georgia by reducing precinct wait times and accepting more absentee ballots. He said the bill would give voters a better experience at the polls and boost the chances for having their votes counted.

“It moves things in a positive way,” said Kennedy, R-Macon.

The bill passed by a 3519 vote along party lines. It now heads to the Georgia House of Representa­tives.

Voting precincts in Georgia and across the country have experience­d lengthy wait times on election day in recent election cycles, raising alarms among voting rights advocates that long lines could deter people from voting.

In Georgia, voting rights advocates called foul after thousands of absentee ballots were rejected in recent elections for having signatures that did not strictly match a person’s identifica­tion document.

The Democratic Party of Georgia sued the Secretary of State’s office in federal court to change how absentee ballots are handled, claiming the practice disenfranc­hises many voters without certain kinds of identifica­tion.

Opponents of the bill, particular­ly Democratic lawmakers, worried the proposed changes could end up curbing voter turnout in areas where precincts have been split. They criticized Kennedy and Republican lawmakers for the bill’s sudden appearance and sprint to the Senate floor, having been filed less than two weeks ago.

Several Democratic senators complained they were unable to propose amendments to the bill after Republican­s mustered enough votes Thursday, March 12, to “engross” the measure, meaning it could not be altered on the Senate floor.

“We’re dealing with something that is so fundamenta­l to what we know as far as voting is concerned,” said Sen. Harold Jones II, D-Augusta. “Why are we rushing this through?”

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John Kennedy

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