Chattanooga Times Free Press

Conservati­ve challenges of voters’ eligibilit­y to be put on trial in Ga.

- BY MARK NIESSE THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON (TNS)

In the tumultuous weeks before Georgia’s 2021 U.S. Senate runoffs, the conservati­ve group True the Vote and its allies challenged the eligibilit­y of 250,000 voters, offered a $1 million “bounty” and recruited Navy SEALs to oversee polling places.

Did those efforts amount to illegal voter intimidati­on? A trial opens Thursday to answer that question in a federal courtroom in Gainesvill­e.

The court drama pits True the Vote, the force behind the election conspiracy movie “2000 Mules,” against Fair Fight, the liberal voting rights group founded by Democrat Stacey Abrams that filed the lawsuit nearly three years ago.

Fair Fight alleges True the Vote violated the Voting Rights Act, which prohibits intimidati­on, threats or coercion of any person for voting or attempting to vote. Fair Fight asked the judge to ban True the Vote from operating in Georgia and from targeting the state’s voters in the future.

“Mass challenges by antidemocr­atic conspiracy peddlers … are part of a coordinate­d nationwide effort to make administer­ing elections more difficult while intimidati­ng and harassing voters,” Fair Fight Executive Director Cianti Stewart-Reid said.

In True the Vote’s defense, the group says it followed a Georgia law that allows citizens to question the eligibilit­y of their neighbors. True the Vote says its goal was to enlist patriotic residents, such as members of the military, to ensure only legitimate voters cast ballots.

“True the Vote’s mission is to help citizens, including veterans, lawfully engage in a wide variety of election integrity efforts,” said Catherine Engelbrech­t, the organizati­on’s founder. “In contrast, Fair Fight has repeatedly filed lawsuits against us and others to prevent lawful election integrity efforts, baselessly alleging racism and intimidati­on.”

True the Vote initially announced in December 2020 that it would challenge the over 364,000 potentiall­y ineligible voters based on public records that indicated they might have moved. Ultimately, Georgia activists who coordinate­d with True the Vote challenged 250,000 voters in 65 counties.

Local election boards rejected the vast majority of voter eligibilit­y challenges. Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock won the runoffs, tipping control of the U.S. Senate.

Soon afterward, the Republican-controlled Georgia General Assembly expanded the state’s voter challenge law, making it explicit that anyone could contest the eligibilit­y of an unlimited number of voter registrati­ons.

The new law came after Republican President Donald Trump lost the 2020 election and repeatedly claimed there was rampant fraud in Georgia and other states he didn’t win. Multiple recounts and investigat­ions confirmed Trump lost to Democrat Joe Biden.

Since the new law was passed, conservati­ve activists have filed over 100,000 more voter challenges, primarily in Atlanta-area counties with large numbers of Democratic voters.

Voter challenges have caused problems for legitimate voters such as Courtney Davis, whose 79-year-old mother went through long waits in Fulton County during last year’s general election and runoffs while election workers verified her credential­s. Poll workers told Davis’ mother the challenge was based on an “invalid date of birth,” even though her driver’s license and voter registrati­on informatio­n contained accurate informatio­n.

“It was very frustratin­g. We felt targeted and harassed by just the sheer audacity of someone to take something away from her in terms of her voting rights,” Davis said. “Being able to exercise that right is super important, and to have that right taken away for no great reason is just really awful.”

True the Vote has said its voter challenges were nondiscrim­inatory, “bounty” money was intended for potential legal defense of Georgians who filed the challenges, and voters were never directly contacted.

One of the Georgia residents who filed challenges, Derek Somerville of Forsyth County, followed the state’s law to ensure accurate voter lists and had no interest in changing the outcome of an election, according to True the Vote’s court filings.

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? A person offers support for Republican Jason Frazier during the public comment portion of a Fulton County Board of Commission­ers meeting in Atlanta in June, when the board rejected Frazier’s nomination to the county election board after he challenged many voters’ eligiblity.
ARVIN TEMKAR/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON A person offers support for Republican Jason Frazier during the public comment portion of a Fulton County Board of Commission­ers meeting in Atlanta in June, when the board rejected Frazier’s nomination to the county election board after he challenged many voters’ eligiblity.

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