Calhoun Times

House Speaker Ralston not keen to end no-excuse absentee voting in Georgia

- By Beau Evans

Georgia’s most powerful state lawmaker threw cold water Thursday on calls by some top Republican officials to eliminate noexcuse absentee voting after the 2020 election cycle.

House Speaker David Ralston, R-Blue Ridge, indicated he may not support any legislativ­e moves to require Georgians to give specific reasons for requesting mailin ballots, following a recent push by Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger to end the practice.

“Somebody’s got to make a real strong case to convince me otherwise,” Ralston said at a news conference at the state Capitol.

Ralston added he plans to create a new committee focused on election access and oversight as state Republican leaders push to tighten Georgia’s voter ID laws. He also said he would support legislatio­n to change the state’s free-for-all “jungle” primary format for special elections.

Election fraud claims by President Donald Trump and his allies are expected to take a back seat going forward after committees in both General Assembly chambers held hearings on the subject in recent weeks and extremists angered by Trump’s election loss stormed the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday.

“People are concerned [about fraud claims] and I think we have to address those concerns,” Ralston said Thursday. “But people need to know the truth. And I don’t think they have been getting the truth all the time.”

State law has allowed Georgia voters since 2005 to vote by mail for any reason, not just due to living out of state or other specific reasons. Raffensper­ger has pressed lawmakers to change the law after local election officials were overwhelme­d counting absentee ballots in elections this year amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Proposals to change Georgia’s election laws look to take center stage in the General Assembly’s 2021 legislativ­e session that kicks off next week. State lawmakers are grappling with changing voter patterns that saw the 2020 presidenti­al election and both U.S. Senate seats flip in Democrats’ favor.

The June 9 primaries, Nov. 3 general election and Jan. 5 Senate runoffs each saw more than one million absentee ballots cast, shattering previous mail-in voting records. Raffensper­ger traced slow turnaround times that sparked suspicions over Georgia’s election integrity to the flood of absentee ballots.

“Until COVID-19, absentee ballot voters were mostly those who needed to cast absentee ballots,” Raffensper­ger said. “For the sake of our resource-stretched and overwhelme­d elections officials, we need to reform our absentee ballot system.”

The Georgia Senate Republican Caucus also has called for eliminatin­g no-excuse absentee voting “to secure our electoral process” as part of a legislativ­e wish list this year that includes requiring a mail-in signature audit and banning absentee ballot drop boxes.

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