Walker County Messenger

Ga. election bill signing draws federal lawsuit, lawmaker arrest

- By Beau Evans From the lawsuit

“Georgians will no doubt soon be overwhelme­d with fancy TV ads, mailers and radio spots attacking this commonsens­e election reform measure. … The “truth is ensuring the integrity of the ballot box is not partisan [but] it’s about Collective­ly, these challenged provisions not only impose protecting the very foundation of who severe and unconstitu­tional restrictio­ns on the voting rights we are as Georgians and Americans. of all Georgians, but they also disparatel­y impact Black voters and effectivel­y deny them an equal opportunit­y to participat­e in the electoral process and elect candidates of their choice.

The speedy passage and signing of controvers­ial Republican-brought legislatio­n overhaulin­g Georgia mail-in and early voting has drawn a federal lawsuit and the arrest of a Democratic state lawmaker.

The sweeping 98-page bill hashed out by top Republican­s in the General Assembly cleared both chambers Thursday afternoon, March 25, and quickly gained Gov. Brian Kemp’s signature in an early-evening ceremony held behind closed doors at the state Capitol.

That decision led to the arrest of Rep. Park Cannon, D-Atlanta, by Capitol

Gov. Brian Kemp

police officers for knocking on the door to Kemp’s office, an episode that was caught on video and widely circulated on social media. She faces felony charges on charges of disrupting legislativ­e proceeding­s and violence toward police.

Cannon’s arrest, which prompted swift condemnati­on from Democratic leaders and supporters, came as opponents of the omnibus bill readied a lawsuit aimed at blocking the election changes on grounds they would violate federal voting-rights law and the U.S. Constituti­on.

The lawsuit, filed by several Democrat-aligned voting groups including the New Georgia Project and Black Voters Matter Fund, echoes criticism from opponents who have argued the bill’s passage would result in curbing election turnout in Black and lowincome communitie­s.

“Collective­ly, these challenged provisions not only impose severe and unconstitu­tional restrictio­ns on the voting rights of all Georgians, but they also disparatel­y impact Black voters and effectivel­y deny them an equal opportunit­y to participat­e in the electoral process and elect candidates of their choice,” the lawsuit claims.

Among dozens of changes, the bill requires stricter voter ID rules for mail-in ballots, bans people from handing out food and drink to voters waiting in line outside polling places and halts absentee ballot applicatio­ns from being accepted within 11 days of an election.

It also allows state officials to take over county election boards for poor performanc­e, which Democratic leaders and voting-rights advocates argue could give Republican­s a back-door way to influence local election operations in many counties.

Additional­ly, the bill requires local election officials to hold two Saturdays of early voting and give counties the option to hold poll hours on two Sundays, marking expanded hours that Republican leaders say will give Georgians more access to the polls.

Republican state leaders have dismissed accusation­s the bill, sponsored by Sen. Max Burns, R-Sylvania, would reduce voter access or benefit their party’s ticket in Georgia. They have insisted the election changes aim to shore up voter confidence after the 2020 elections spurred unfounded fraud claims.

Kemp, who signed the bill about an hour after its final General Assembly passage, batted back at Democrats’ attempts to cast the bill as a form of voter suppressio­n akin to discrimina­tory tactics of the Jim Crow era.

“Contrary to the hyper-partisan rhetoric … the facts are this new law will expand voting access in the Peach State,” Kemp said in a video speech shortly after signing the bill.

“Georgians will no doubt soon be overwhelme­d with fancy TV ads, mailers and radio spots attacking this common-sense election reform measure. … The truth is ensuring the integrity of the ballot box is not partisan [but] it’s about protecting the very foundation of who we are as Georgians and Americans.”

The governor’s speech was interrupte­d briefly by the arrest of Cannon, a Black lawmaker who drew comparison­s to civil rights movement heroes the late Congressma­n John Lewis and Martin Luther King Jr. as officers forced her out of the Capitol and booked her into the Fulton County Jail. She was released hours later.

Many observers and critics including highlighte­d the irony of a Black lawmaker being arrested over a bill that has been slammed as an echo of old segregatio­nist laws and practices in the state.

“While Kemp signed the most restrictiv­e voter suppressio­n bill seen since Jim Crow, authoritie­s outside unjustly arrested a Black legislator and charged her with two felonies,” the Democratic Party of Georgia said on Twitter. “This is the civil-rights fight of our generation.”

Meanwhile, Republican officials in Georgia and outside the state mustered to defend the election bill against the lawsuit filed in the Atlantabas­ed U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia.

Ronna McDaniel, chairwoman of the Republican National Committee, slammed Democrats’ “false narrative” on the election bill and said her organizati­on “look[s] forward to defending this law in court.”

“Democrats can lie and spin about the bill all they want, but the real question should be: ‘Why are Democrats so terrified of a transparen­t and secure election process?’ “McDaniel said in a statement.

 ??  ?? Gov. Brian Kemp
Gov. Brian Kemp
 ??  ?? Park Cannon
Park Cannon
 ??  ?? Max Burns
Max Burns

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