Calhoun Times

Secretary of State fires back at federal lawsuit over Ga. election law overhaul

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA — Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger is turning up the heat on the Justice Department over its lawsuit challengin­g controvers­ial election law changes the General Assembly adopted last March.

Raffensper­ger announced Wednesday he has filed a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request with the federal agency to release any records of contacts it may have had with civil and voting rights organizati­ons in light of the lawsuit.

“We believe there’s potential they’ve been following orders from (2018 Democratic gubernator­ial nominee) Stacey Abrams and others,” Raffensper­ger said. “We think something is going on.”

The FOIA request calls for the release of communicat­ions between the Justice Department and 62 individual­s and organizati­ons, including Fair Fight Action, a voting rights group Abrams founded; the American Civil Liberties Union; the Southern Poverty Law Center; and Perkins Coie, a law firm that represents Democrats in voting cases.

The lawsuit, filed in June, accuses Georgia of violating the federal Voting Rights Act by denying or abridging the right of Black Georgians to vote based on their race or color by, among other things, reducing access to absentee voting.

The law, which the Republican-controlled legislatur­e passed along party lines, replaces the signaturem­atch verificati­on process for absentee ballots with an ID requiremen­t.

Raffensper­ger accused the Justice Department of unfairly singling out Georgia. For example, the new law’s requiremen­t that Georgians wishing to vote by absentee ballot submit a driver’s license number or some other form of identifica­tion is the same provision imposed by the state of Minnesota, he said.

Likewise, the new law’s provisions for early voting in Georgia are less restrictiv­e than current laws in New York, New Jersey and Delaware that are not being taken to court, Raffensper­ger said.

“We’re being held to a higher standard than most other states,” he said. “We want Georgia treated the same as everyone else.”

Lauren Groh-Wargo, CEO of Fair Fight Action, dismissed Raffensper­ger’s FOIA request as political gamesmansh­ip.

“The latest nonsense from Brad Raffensper­ger is more grandstand­ing and another sad move by a very desperate man,” she wrote in a Twitter post.

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Brad Raffensper­ger

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