Walker County Messenger

Georgia primary election delayed to June 9

The primary election features presidenti­al, state and local contests

- By Beau Evans

tion featuring presidenti­al, state and local primary contests scheduled for May 19 faced a scenario in which many poll workers may not have shown up to staff voting precincts.

Poll workers on average tend to be older adults who are more at risk of harmful impacts from COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel strain of coronaviru­s that has sickened thousands of Georgians and killed hundreds.

On Thursday, April 9, Raffensper­ger said his office has fielded “reports of mounting difficulti­es” that county elections officials were struggling to have precincts ready inperson early voting set to begin April 27, ahead of a May 19 election.

The three-week delay gives state and county election officials more time to train poll workers, distribute cleaning supplies and draw backup plans for any possible issues.

“Just like our brave health-care workers and first responders, our county election officials and poll workers are undertakin­g work critical to our democracy, and they will continue to do this critical work with all the challenges that the current crisis has brought forth,” Raffensper­ger said.

It’s the second time the state’s presidenti­al primary will be delayed after originally being set for March 24. Raffensper­ger’s office indicated delaying it and the local primaries again would be tough, since holding the primaries past June 9 could conflict with federal law requiring certain deadlines for runoff results and ballot creation to be met for the Nov. 3 general election.

“I certainly realize that every difficulty will not be completely solved by the time in-person voting begins for the June 9 election, but elections must happen even in less than ideal circumstan­ces,” Raffensper­ger said.

Raffensper­ger, a Republican, faced increasing pressure in recent weeks from influentia­l Republican lawmakers including House Speaker David Ralston and all 11 of Georgia’s Republican congressio­nal members to push back the primary to mid-June.

Until Thursday, April 9, Raffensper­ger said he would need the governor to extend the public health emergency beyond its original April 13 expiration date before he could delay the primary, though legislativ­e counsel for the General Assembly disputed that legal interpreta­tion.

Kemp signed an executive order Wednesday, April 8, extending the emergency status through May 13, which Raffensper­ger said cleared the way for him to act.

Georgia Democratic leaders, meanwhile, had previously opposed a delay past May 19, arguing state officials should instead focus on bolstering absentee voting.

Raffensper­ger’s decision also followed an intense national backlash in Wisconsin, where a primary election was held Tuesday, April 7, despite efforts from Wisconsin’s governor to delay it. News reports showed long lines of voters wearing face masks in the middle of the worst period of the coronaviru­s outbreak, sparking anguish over the potential health dangers and accusation­s of voter suppressio­n.

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