Chattanooga Times Free Press

NATIONAL MEDIA FAILED IN GEORGIA

- CREATORS.COM Erick Erickson Commentary

This election should remind us how vital and necessary local journalism is to factual reporting. National media outlets routinely fell for stories about topics outside their knowledge base — stories specially crafted by political operatives wanting to shape narratives about campaigns.

All one need do is look at Georgia, where Secretary of State Brian Kemp won a closely watched governor’s race against progressiv­e darling Stacey Abrams. National reporters breathless­ly reported stories about Kemp engaging in campaign shenanigan­s to such an extent that progressiv­es are convinced he stole the race. What is most interestin­g is Georgia reporters never covered the stories or covered them with such a command of the facts that the national implicatio­ns were shown to be partisan spin.

In southern Georgia, national reporters covered the tale of Kemp trying to close a county’s black voting precincts, forcing black voters to drive or walk many miles to predominan­tly white polling locations. The truth? The Democratic county commission­ers and Democrat-controlled local board of elections hired a consultant to review polling locations for compliance with the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act. The consultant recommende­d consolidat­ing several locations deemed unfriendly to handicappe­d voters. The locations were all the Republican precincts that voted for Donald Trump. The Democrat majority precincts were not touched.

The Associated Press reported the story of a woman who was denied voter registrati­on because of Georgia’s “exact match” law that requires a voter exactly match their voter registrati­on form to the informatio­n on their driver’s license. This voter had a hyphenated last name, and she was denied voter registrati­on because she failed to include the hyphen. The truth? She was actually denied voter registrati­on because she had already registered to vote and the computer system flagged her new registrati­on as a duplicate. The Associated Press never corrected the story.

National media outlets also reported the Georgia secretary of state had thrown voters off the election rolls this year. The truth? The secretary of state is prohibited from removing people from voting rolls in election years. Local election officials do remove people from the rolls during election years, but only if the voter dies, is convicted of a felony or is deemed incompeten­t by a court.

Finally, for the past two months, national outlets have run stories suggesting Kemp has a conflict of interest because he runs Georgia’s elections and is on the ballot. The truth? The secretary of state runs for office and is on the ballot every four years. No one complained till now. But what about the merits of the allegation­s?

In Georgia, local boards of election control elections, not the secretary of state. All the election year complaints about voting equipment, long lines, voters denied the right to vote, etc., are all local issues. The secretary of state only gets involved once an election is concluded, when he becomes the chairman of the state’s election board. Kemp resigned two days after the election to avoid the conflict of interest.

Local media in Georgia got these stories right while national outlets flubbed them. They distorted the facts and got basic facts wrong. The national reporters wanted to build narrative arches with protagonis­ts and villains instead of just giving people the facts. As local news outlets rely more on national reporters, more stories like these will be reported and even more people will distrust the press.

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