Los Angeles Times

VOTING BEGINS IN GEORGIA

Lines shorter for Jan. 5 Senate runoffs than for general election.

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There are few long lines at the start of in- person balloting in crucial Senate runoffs.

ATLANTA — Early inperson voting began Monday in the runoff elections for Georgia’s two U. S. Senate seats, with lines reported to be shorter than in the first days of early voting for the general election last month.

More than half of the record 5 million votes in the Nov. 3 general election were cast during its three- week early voting period. Early inperson voting could be even more important in the Jan. 5 runoffs because of the short period for voters to request and return ballots by mail.

The two races in which Democrats Jon Ossoff and the Rev. Raphael Warnock try to oust Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeff ler, respective­ly, will decide which party controls the U. S. Senate.

No one expects turnout to be as high as it was for the general election. But Bernard Fraga, an Emory University professor who studies voting, said overall turnout could reach 4 million.

President Trump has relentless­ly pushed baseless claims of widespread fraud in the general election, in which he lost in Georgia. In an overnight tweet just hours before early voting began, he continued his attack on Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, pushing him to take action or risk harming the chances for Perdue and Loeff ler.

“What a fool Governor @ BrianKempG­A of Georgia is,” the president tweeted. “Could have been so easy, but now we have to do it the hard way. Demand this clown call a Special Session and open up signature verificati­on, NOW. Otherwise, could be a bad day for two GREAT Senators on January 5th.”

In contrast to the f irst day of early voting in October, when more than 125,000 people cast ballots and some people lined up for hours, few long lines were reported Monday.

One question was how many mail- in ballots will be cast in the election. By Friday, 1.2 million mail- in ballots had been requested and 200,000 returned. In the general election, Democrat Joe Biden won 65% of the 1.3 million absentee ballots that were returned in Georgia, a record fueled by the COVID- 19 pandemic.

Fraga said it’s possible that mailed ballots will be even more favorable for Democrats in the runoff because of attacks on the integrity of mail- in voting by Trump and many Georgia Republican­s.

That means early in- person voting, which Trump narrowly won in November, could be even more important for Republican­s. Both parties may also drive voters toward the early polls with the Christmas and New Year’s holidays looming.

Republican attacks on mail- in voting also worry some Democrats. Meghan Shannon, 36, voted in person for Ossoff and Warnock on Monday at State Farm Arena in downtown Atlanta, partly driven by fears that absentee ballots will be overly scrutinize­d.

“I think the absentee ballots are going to be questioned when they count the votes,” the architect said. “I wanted to be here in person so my vote is counted and it’s unconteste­d.”

Melissa McJunkin, 40, voted in Rome, a solidly Republican area in northweste­rn Georgia, and cast her ballot for Perdue and Loeff ler, saying they “will help make decisions based on what I think is the right choice.” She’d heard allegation­s of voter fraud in the general election and was a bit worried about the integrity of the runoff vote.

“I’ve never had a problem before now trusting it, but now I feel like there may be something going on that I don’t trust,” she said.

Towanda Jones voted in downtown Atlanta for Ossoff and Warnock and dismissed the fraud allegation­s, which have been repeatedly denied by election officials.

“The system is working as it should, and I think our current president is just a sore loser,” she said.

The 54- year- old Black hairstylis­t said police reform was her main priority.

“I have two grown sons,” Jones said. “The amount of Black lives that have been lost due to police brutality upset me.”

Deborah Harp Gibbs of

Lilburn said she voted for Perdue and Loeffler “to keep America great.”

Gibbs said it’s important for people to acknowledg­e the United States as a Christian nation. “I want prayer in school and ‘ God Bless America’ and apple pie,” Gibbs said, adding that she thinks the Republican­s could keep things on “the right track.”

Tony Christy, 62, said he was concerned about the balance of power in Washington as he voted in Kennesaw, a conservati­ve- leaning city just northwest of Atlanta, for the two Republican­s. If the Democrats win, there will be 50 senators from each party and Vice President- elect Kamala Harris would be the tiebreakin­g vote in the chamber.

That would give too much power to the Democrats, Christy said, because “then not only will they have the presidency, but they’ll have the House and the Senate, which is not a good balance to have.”

But Araya Araya of Lilburn said he voted for Warnock in part to give Biden a chance to get things done.

“I didn’t want the Senate to be majority Republican where everything Presidente­lect Biden is preparing to do is going to get blocked,” Araya said.

Each of Georgia’s 159 counties must offer at least one early voting location during business hours, with many in metro Atlanta offering multiple sites, extended hours and weekend voting.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Ben Gray
Associated Press Ben Gray
 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? VOTERS WAIT to cast their ballots at the Buckhead Library in the Buckhead section of Atlanta on the f irst day of early in- person voting for the runoff elections in Georgia that will determine control of the U. S. Senate.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times VOTERS WAIT to cast their ballots at the Buckhead Library in the Buckhead section of Atlanta on the f irst day of early in- person voting for the runoff elections in Georgia that will determine control of the U. S. Senate.

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