Walker County Messenger

Judge extends deadline to accept absentee ballots

- By Beau Evans

on Nov. 6, which is within three days of the original deadline.

The ruling looks to calm some fears of absentee voting reliabilit­y amid an expected slow delivery by the U.S. Postal Service and huge numbers of mail-in ballots in Georgia and across the country due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

“Extending the deadline would ensure that voters who receive their ballots shortly before Election Day are able to mail their ballots without feat that their vote will not count,” Ross wrote in her 70-page ruling.

Ross’s decision stems from a lawsuit filed in May by the voter registrati­on group New Georgia Project against Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger that aimed to have the absentee acceptance deadline extended beyond 7 p.m. on Election Day.

The judge agreed the mail-in acceptance deadline should be extended but dismissed other claims sought in the lawsuit, including bids to make postage free for absentee ballots and to mail absentee applicatio­ns to all registered Georgia voters, as occurred for the June 9 primary.

Plaintiffs had also asked for the receipt deadline to be extended by five days, which the judge shortened to three days in her ruling.

More than 7,200 absentee ballots were rejected from among roughly 1.1 million cast in the June primary due to being received after the 7 p.m. Election Day deadline, Ross’s ruling noted.

With many more Georgians expected to vote by mail in the upcoming general election, Ross wrote that “the burden on many voters will be severe” if absentee ballots that arrive shortly after the strict Election Day deadline are rejected.

“The court notes it is reluctant to interfere with Georgia’s statutory election machinery,” Ross wrote. “However, where the risk

of disenfranc­hisement is great, as is the case here, narrowly tailored injunctive relief is appropriat­e.”

The ruling was immediatel­y hailed by Georgia Democratic leaders, who touted the extended deadline as a boost for voter access ahead of the troubled and pivotal general election that will see presidenti­al, U.S. Senate, congressio­nal and statehouse contests on the ballot.

“Today’s decision is a huge victory for Georgia voters, and a huge win in the fight for every vote to

be counted,” said Georgia Democratic Party Chairwoman and state Sen. Nikema Williams, D-Atlanta. “All Georgians deserve to have their voice heard, and in the midst of a global pandemic, it is the responsibi­lity of our democracy to make voting by mail and early voting options as accessible as possible.”

Raffensper­ger’s office plans to appeal the ruling over concerns the extended deadline would hinder the ability of local election officials to process ballots in a timely manner, said Deputy Secretary of State Jordan Fuchs.

“Extending the absentee ballot receipt deadline is a bad idea that will make it

nearly impossible for election officials to complete their required post-election tasks in the timeline that is required by law,” Fuchs said Monday, Aug. 31.

Monday’s (Aug. 31) court ruling came as Raffensper­ger’s office launched a new online portal for Georgia voters to request absentee ballots via the internet rather than asking for one by mail or at county election offices.

Raffensper­ger’s office is now pushing to recruit more poll workers for the general election after a shortage during the June primary contribute­d to long lines and technical knowhow issues with the state’s new voting machines.

 ??  ?? Sen. Nikema Williams
Sen. Nikema Williams

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