The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Voter ID proof hrader for some

New law hinders residents without a driver’s license.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

Every Georgia voter was already required to have some kind of ID to vote.

Whether they have the right kind of ID to most easily vote by mail under the state’s new voting law is another matter.

About 272,000 registered voters lack a driver’s license or state ID number on file with election officials, meaning they’d have to provide a copy of other identi

fying documents when requesting an absentee ballot for this fall’s local elections.

Even voter ID cards issued by county election offices are inadequate unless voters take a photo or make a copy of it, then submit it with their absentee ballot applicatio­ns.

The new absentee ID requiremen­ts under Georgia’s voting law are being tested as thousands of voters have requested mail-in ballots ahead of municipal elections, including the

closely watched race for Atlanta mayor. In prior elections, officials verified voters by comparing signatures with those on file.

“I think everybody should show ID, but it’s hard for some people,” said Juanita Collier, a Walmart employee who has a driver’s license, at a Dekalb County voter informatio­n stand outside the Chamblee MARTA station this week. “People should be able to vote as long as they

show something for ID.”

The ID requiremen­ts are simple for the 97% of registered voters with driver’s licenses or state ID cards obtained from the Department of Driver Services. Those voters can prove their identities by filling in their nine-digit ID numbers when requesting and returning absentee ballots.

Voters who have some other kind of identifica­tion, such as a U.S. Passport or military ID, would have to make a photocopy.

Allvotersh­avebeenreq­uired to show photo ID for in-person voting in Georgia since 2008. Most people register to vote when they get their driver’s licenses, the state’s primary form of voter ID. Anyone who registers to vote through the mail must present ID before being allowed to vote for the first time.

Georgia’s government is planning a $250,000 ad campaign to promote free ID cards from the Department of Driver Services that can be used for absentee voting.

The Democratic Party of Georgia is encouragin­g voters to obtain IDS issued at driver’s license offices so that voters have no issues no matter how they vote, whether by mail or in person.

“Promoting ways to obtain a voter ID card does not change the fact that Republican­s have made voting by mail more difficult,” said Saira Draper of the Democratic Party. “Obtaining a photocopy can be challengin­g for many Georgians, and this additional step will mean disenfranc­hisement for many voters with mobility issues, transporta­tion issues, in poverty or who are sheltering in place.”

The new ID requiremen­ts have led to some absentee ballot applicatio­n rejections.

The most common reasons for applicatio­n rejections so far are missing voter identifica­tion or failure to use Georgia’s new absentee request form that requires ID, according to state absentee ballot data through Wednesday.

“People will have to get used to what’s required. So we might see some confusion at the beginning,” said Cobb County Elections Director Janine Eveler. “We’re communicat­ing with voters who do have missing informatio­n” to allow them to correct their applicatio­ns.

Over 1.3 million of Georgia’s 5 million voters in last November’s elections cast absentee ballots, a record number as voters avoided in-person polling places during the coronaviru­s pandemic. Typically, about 5% of voters in previous elections returned absentee ballots.

In the presidenti­al race, about two-thirds of absentee voters supported Democrat Joe Biden after Republican President Donald Trump criticized remote voting, despite the fact that he used it.

An audit by the GBI and election investigat­ors found no cases of fraud among 15,000 ballot envelope signatures reviewed in Cobb County last December.

The majority-republican Georgia General Assembly earlier this year required more ID as part of the state’s new voting law, which also shortened absentee applicatio­n deadlines, reduced the number of ballot drop boxes and allowed state officials to take over county election boards.

“I don’t see a need for that. I feel like it’s harder for people to exercise their natural right to vote because of all those changes,” said Jeremiah Gilyard, a Dekalb voter who stopped by the voter informatio­n table at the Chamblee MARTA station last week.

 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Yimeka Robbins of Dunwoody (left) receives informatio­n from Dekalb County election officials Wednesday at the Chamblee MARTA Station, as part of the county’s efforts to educate voters on changes in the new state law.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Yimeka Robbins of Dunwoody (left) receives informatio­n from Dekalb County election officials Wednesday at the Chamblee MARTA Station, as part of the county’s efforts to educate voters on changes in the new state law.
 ?? ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON PHOTOS BY JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE ?? Dekalb County Election officials Nytia Harris (left) and Lamashia Davis share a Dekalb County voter registrati­on applicatio­n with Christoper Brooks on Wednesday at the Chamblee MARTA Station.
ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON PHOTOS BY JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE Dekalb County Election officials Nytia Harris (left) and Lamashia Davis share a Dekalb County voter registrati­on applicatio­n with Christoper Brooks on Wednesday at the Chamblee MARTA Station.
 ??  ?? Dekalb County election officials (from left) Nytia Harris, Erin Adam and Lamashia Davis work to spread informatio­n about changes in voter laws and offer free voter IDS at the Chamblee MARTA Station.
Dekalb County election officials (from left) Nytia Harris, Erin Adam and Lamashia Davis work to spread informatio­n about changes in voter laws and offer free voter IDS at the Chamblee MARTA Station.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States