Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia elections ranking improves to No. 11 in MIT study

- BY MARK NIESSE

Georgia’s elections ranked No. 11 in the nation, scoring above average in turnout, registrati­on and mail ballot rejections in the 2022 elections, according to the Elections Performanc­e Index by the MIT Election Data & Science Lab.

The new ranking is an improvemen­t from Georgia’s position at No. 21 after the 2020 election and lower scores in prior years.

The Elections Performanc­e Index is a biennial comparison of election administra­tion across the country, relying on a combinatio­n of data and survey responses.

Georgia had the 13th highest turnout in the midterm elections, at 53% of the eligible voting population with nearly 4 million ballots cast.

The state’s voter registrati­on rate, at 86% of eligible citizens, was the 19thbest in the nation. There are nearly 8 million registered voters in Georgia.

Just 0.1% of absentee ballots were rejected, measured as a percentage of all votes cast in 2022, marking the latest year of declines in discarded ballots from a peak of 0.3% in 2016. Since then, state laws have simplified informatio­n required on absentee ballot envelopes and required ID numbers along with voter signatures to confirm identity.

Georgia’s ranking was hindered by categories based on survey responses rather than data.

Georgia scored worse than the national average on survey questions about registrati­on problems, disability access and voting wait times.

The secretary of state’s office has said data showed average wait times of about two minutes in the 2022 general election, lower than the 9.7-minute wait time from an MIT survey of a sample of voters.

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