Call & Times

Disinforma­tion reigns in debate over Georgia’s new voting bill

- +HQU\ 2OVHQ Henry Olsen is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center.

Democrats have been tarnishing Georgia’s new voting law, saying it represents a return to Jim Crow. That calumny besmirches an effort that largely succeeds at balancing extensive voter access with strong election integrity.

Jim Crow was a heinous system that systematic­ally denied Black Americans ± and many poor Whites ± their constituti­onal right to vote through bogus ³literacy tests,´ poll taxes and other measures such as ³Whites only´ Democratic primaries in states where Democrats were sure to win. Backed by racist law enforcemen­t and threats of violence or lynching by the .u .lux .lan and similar groups, even Black people who were able to vote often chose not to. It took the civil rights revolution, and especially the Voting Rights Act of 1965, to undo this system.

The new Georgia law does nothing to return the state to this terrible time. Black voters will still be able to register without hindrance. And they, like all other Georgians, will be able to vote in many different ways: on Election Day, in-person before Election Day, or by mail without an excuse if they are 65 or older.

Democrats charge that some of the law’s provisions will have a differenti­al impact on Black voting and thus demonstrat­e preMudicia­l intent. These provisions include reTuiremen­ts that voters present a photo ID when voting in person that those voting by mail provide their driver’s license number or the last four digits of their Social Security number and that in-person voting on Sundays are now a county option rather than a statewide mandate. 1one of these provisions should prevent anyone from voting, and many are popular even among Black voters.

Photo identifica­tion

is a case in point. Democrats have long resisted the reTuiremen­t on the theory that some voters without driver’s licenses or other state-issued IDs could be disenfranc­hised. But as progressiv­e elections analyst Ruy Teixeira points out, studies regularly show that photo ID reTuiremen­ts have not reduced turnout. Georgia’s law also permits voters to ask for a free voter-ID card if they don’t have one of the six permitted forms of photo ID. A recent poll conducted for the Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on also found that 74 of Georgians support a photo-ID reTuiremen­t for voting, including 63 of Black respondent­s. Democrats’ obMections are an answer in search of a problem.

The new mail-in ballot measures are also not likely to depress turnout. Black voters already prefer to vote in person, either early or on Election Day. Seventy percent say they voted in-person in the 2020 presidenti­al election according to the AJC poll. 0oreover, the law’s new security measure, which replaces the old system of using a person’s signature to verify absentee ballots with a reTuiremen­t that absentee voters provide a driver’s license or state ID card, will likely decrease the chance that valid ballots are wrongly reMected. That’s a good thing that everyone should cheer.

1o-excuse mail balloting also did not lead to higher voter turnout in 2020. Stanford University researcher­s examined this Tuestion in a recent study and found that turnout increased by roughly the same amount in states that did not allow no-excuse mail voting as in states that did. ³Absentee voting doesn’t significan­tly affect whether people vote or not,´ the study’s primary author said. ³It mostly changes how they vote. Voter interest is far more important in determinin­g turnout.´

The changes to Sunday early voting will also not likely have any effect. Despite

Democratic claims that Georgia’s after-church ³souls to the polls´ early voting initiative­s drove turnout, data from the 2020 presidenti­al election and the Jan. 5 Senate runoffs showed that Sundays were the least popular days to vote in both races. In the runoff, more than 174,000 people voted on each weekday of early voting, but only 31,000 people voted on Sunday, Dec. 20, and only about 20,000 voted the following Sunday. Sundays were also the lightest voting day of the week in the 1ovember presidenti­al election as well. Georgia’s new law also mandates an extra Saturday of early voting and allows counties the option of allowing early voting on Sundays. Voting experts say the bill expands early voting access, the opposite of Democratic claims.

Even President Joe Biden’s claim that the law bans voters from receiving water and food while waiting in line is false. The bill prevents electionee­ring under the guise of offering food and water, but it allows poll workers to provide self-service water to voters close to the polls and allows anyone to offer food and drinks more than 150 feet away from the polling location or more than 25 feet from people in line. It also reTuires polls where there is a wait of more than an hour to hire enough staff to reduce the waiting time. That will make it easier, not harder, for people to vote.

1o bill is perfect, and reasonable people can disagree about the balance between voter access and election integrity. But Democratic claims that this law amounts to racist voter suppressio­n should be seen for what they are: overwrough­t partisan rhetoric that unnecessar­ily increases racial and political tensions.

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