Walker County Messenger

Georgia secretary of state faces backlash over double-voting claims

- By Beau Evans

Georgia’s top elections official is facing backlash from voting rights groups and a former secretary of state over allegation­s he made this week on double voting in the state’s June 9 primary.

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger held a news conference Tuesday, Sept. 8, to announce his office had launched investigat­ions into 1,000 alleged instances of people intentiona­lly voting twice in the primaries: once by absentee ballot and once in person on Election Day.

Raffensper­ger presented no evidence to support the doublevoti­ng allegation­s and stressed the investigat­ion was in its early stages, leading several voter advocates to slam the Republican secretary of state for going public with the claims before bringing proof of wrongdoing.

Former Secretary of State Cathy Cox on Wednesday called Raffensper­ger’s announceme­nt “highly irregular” and “improper”, and suggested his actions aimed to “sow chaos and cast doubt” on mail-in voting ahead of the

Nov. 3 general election.

Cox, a Democrat who served as Georgia’s elections chief from 1999 to 2007, said typically investigat­ions into voter fraud involve oversight from the state board of elections and are not directed entirely by the secretary of state. She said Raffensper­ger “seems to have already pre-judged these matters.”

“We don’t know those facts because there has been no investigat­ion to this point,” Cox said in a news conference Wednesday, Sept. 9.

“Instead, we had a secretary of state who jumped to the conclusion that a thousand people had committed a crime and would be prosecuted.”

Raffensper­ger’s office batted back criticism Wednesday, Sept. 9, and argued the only aim of the investigat­ion is to curb chances for double voting.

“For Secretary Cox to say we shouldn’t investigat­e 1,000 attempts to steal an election is ridiculous and tone deaf to the needs of election integrity,” said Deputy Secretary of State Jordan Fuchs.

This election season has seen vote-by-mail skyrocket in Georgia amid health concerns brought by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The primary elections in June drew historic numbers of absentee ballots. The upcoming general election is also poised for huge mail-in voting turnout.

Raffensper­ger did not outline Tuesday, Sept. 9, how his office might know for certain that 1,000 people intentiona­lly voted twice, other than to note that “we know one person was bragging about it down in Long County.”

He said around 150,000 voters applied for absentee ballots for the June primaries, then showed up to vote in person. Of those, he claimed 1,000 voters intentiona­lly cast an absentee ballot before voting in person without first canceling their absentee ballots on Election Day as is required.

“We’ll be investigat­ing all 1,000 [double-voting allegation­s] and we’ll get to the bottom of it,” Raffensper­ger said at Tuesday’s (Sept. 8) news conference.

He added results from the investigat­ion should be ready “in the next couple of weeks.”

Shortly after, the Democratic Party of Georgia’s executive director accused Raffensper­ger of pushing “voting conspiracy theories and disinforma­tion” that threatened to undermine confidence in the upcoming election’s integrity.

Raffensper­ger’s announceme­nt was also called “a deliberate distractio­n” by the Georgia Voter Empowermen­t Task Force, a voting rights group composed of representa­tives from several other groups including the NAACP and Fair Fight Action, which was set up by 2018 Democratic gubernator­ial nominee Stacey Abrams.

“Under his so-called leadership and the ‘meltdown’ of an election over which he presided, Georgians faced barriers in casting their votes and having their votes counted,” the task force said in a statement. “Now, unsurprisi­ngly, Georgia’s failed top elections official has decided to push a right-wing narrative spreading across the country rather than focusing on protecting the Constituti­onal rights of every Georgian.”

The Georgia chapter of the ACLU also urged anyone “threatened with prosecutio­n” over double-voting allegation­s to contact them for legal assistance.

 ??  ?? Cathy Cox
Cathy Cox

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