Walker County Messenger

SoS seeks investigat­ions of non-US citizens who tried to register to vote in Ga.

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA — Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger is referring the cases of 1,634 people who tried to register to vote but could not be verified as U.S. citizens for investigat­ion by state and local authoritie­s.

The names of those wouldbe voters turned up last month in the first citizenshi­p audit of voter rolls in Georgia history.

Raffensper­ger blamed voting rights groups for many of the attempts by non-citizens to register.

“Attempting to register to vote while knowing you do not possess the qualificat­ions to vote is a felony in Georgia, a serious one,” he said at a news conference Monday, April 11. “Outside groups that attempt to help noncitizen­s register to vote will face consequenc­es as well.”

Raffensper­ger backed a constituti­onal amendment state Senate President Pro Tempore Butch Miller, R-Gainesvill­e, introduced at the beginning of this year’s legislativ­e session to ban non-U.S. citizens from voting in Georgia.

Raffensper­ger cited a poll showing 80% of Georgians support banning noncitizen­s from voting.

The Senate Ethics Committee approved Miller’s constituti­onal amendment, but it got no further in the legislatur­e. Opponents argued state law already prohibits non-U.S. citizens from voting.

Raffensper­ger’s remarks on noncitizen voting came on the same day a lawsuit Fair Fight Action, a voting rights group founded by Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Stacey Abrams, went to trial in federal court.

“Stacey Abrams and her allies are trying to get rid of Georgia’s citizenshi­p check for voter registrati­on, and I will fight her efforts to undermine the integrity of our elections all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court if I have to,” Raffensper­ger said.

Cianti Stewart-Reid, executive director of Fair Fight Action, vowed the trial would bring to light the difficulti­es individual Georgia voters face trying to cast ballots.

“Since the start of this lawsuit, we have highlighte­d real voters and their challenges because we believe reporting their experience­s to be one of the most effective ways of demonstrat­ing the barriers in Georgia’s elections system,” she said. “We will continue to amplify the voices of voters at trial.”

Raffensper­ger said he’s referring the cases of the people whose names turned up in the audit to the State Election Board, the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion and local district attorneys.

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Brad Raffensper­ger

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