Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bill gives voters more time before being purged

- BY MARK NIESSE NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

ATLANTA — A new bill to overhaul Georgia’s elections would alert voters and give them more time before their registrati­ons are canceled, a proposal that could curtail large-scale removals of voters from the rolls.

The Republican-sponsored legislatio­n would preserve regular registrati­on cancellati­ons when voters are inactive for several years, move out of state, die or are convicted of a felony.

Voter registrati­on cancellati­ons were a contentiou­s issue during last year’s election for governor, when Democrat Stacey Abrams accused Republican Brian Kemp of creating barriers to voting. Georgia election officials, dating to 2012, removed more than 1.4 million voter registrati­ons while Kemp was secretary of state.

The bill calls for inactive voters to be notified by mail at least 30 days before they’re removed, and their registrati­ons wouldn’t be canceled unless they fail to contact election officials for eight or nine years, which is two years longer than under current state law.

The changes to Georgia’s voter registrati­on laws are included in a bill introduced last week that would switch the state from its 17-year-old electronic voting system to touchscree­n machines that print ballots.

While the planned $150 million replacemen­t of Georgia’s voting system will likely lead to heated debates over election accuracy and security, the legislatio­n’s provisions dealing with voter registrati­on cancellati­ons could also have a major impact.

In addition, House Bill 316 would enroll Georgia in a 25-state collaborat­ion — the Electronic Registrati­on Informatio­n Center — to share voter informatio­n for the purpose of tracking and canceling voters who move out of state.

“It is critical that only eligible, registered voters are allowed to elect Georgia’s leaders and make decisions for Georgia’s communitie­s,” said Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, who supports the bill. “Carefully maintainin­g voter rolls is vital to preventing injustice, and collecting accurate and updated voter informatio­n is fundamenta­l to the mission of safe and secure elections.”

The state’s practice of regularly canceling voter registrati­ons is part of a sweeping federal lawsuit that attempts to overturn state election laws that created obstacles to voting. The lawsuit was filed by a group called Fair Fight Action created by allies of Abrams after she lost November’s election for governor.

“The proposed changes would still allow the type of mass voter purging orchestrat­ed by Brian Kemp. A slightly-less-aggressive form of voter suppressio­n is still voter suppressio­n,” said Lauren Groh-Wargo, CEO for Fair Fight Action.

The bill’s sponsor, House Judiciary Chairman Barry Fleming, said the primary goal of the bill is to update the state’s voting system. He said it’s also important to update the state’s laws to ensure that only registered voters can cast ballots. Voting fraud is rare in Georgia, but Kemp’s office in 2014 investigat­ed voter registrati­on forms that were allegedly forged, among other isolated cases.

It makes sense to extend the period before inactive voters’ registrati­ons are canceled so that it’s more likely to coincide with when voters renew their driver’s licenses every 10 years, he said. Georgia voters are automatica­lly registered to vote when they get a driver’s license unless they opt out.

“In this last election, we had record registrati­on and record turnout. That’s something to be proud of,” said Fleming, a Republican from Harlem. “We want to continue that in Georgia, making it easier for people to vote and having a voting system that’s quick and efficient and can be audited.”

Under current Georgia laws, voters can be declared “inactive” after three years in which they had no contact with the election system, failing to participat­e in elections, respond to election officials’ mail or update their registrati­ons. Inactive voters retain their right to vote.

Then if they don’t vote in either of the next two general elections, their registrati­ons can be canceled. The process can take six or seven years.

The bill introduced Thursday would change the time before voters become inactive to five years, and then their registrati­ons could be canceled after two general elections. That process would take eight or nine years.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia opposes laws that require voters to participat­e or risk losing their right to vote, said Sean Young, the organizati­on’s legal director. But the extension of time before registrati­ons could be canceled is a step in the right direction, he said.

“These [registrati­on] list maintenanc­e provisions are improvemen­ts to the current system,” Young said. “We’ll be monitoring this bill’s movement very closely.”

State Rep. Scott Holcomb, a Democrat from Atlanta, said it’s important that cancellati­ons could be delayed for two years because it would protect voters who participat­e only in presidenti­al elections. Those voters would be considered active voters if they cast ballots before their registrati­ons are canceled.

“All of these are constructi­ve steps to make it harder for the state to purge voters — and that should be one of our goals,” said Holcomb, who plans to introduce a bill seeking a voting system using handmarked paper ballots.

HB 316 also proposes that the state pass into law provisions that federal judges ordered in preliminar­y rulings surroundin­g November’s election.

Absentee ballots couldn’t be rejected because of apparent signature mismatches alone, and organizati­ons could provide an unlimited number of volunteers to help voters who need assistance casting their ballots, such as those who speak English as a second language or have disabiliti­es.

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