The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Judge: District ruling may delay primary

He’s pondering the fairness of state’s new political maps.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

A federal judge suggested he could delay Georgia’s primary election, possibly until June or July, if he rules that the state’s new political maps illegally weakened representa­tion of Black voters.

U.S. District Judge Steve Jones said in court Wednesday that he would consider the risks to voter confusion and confidence before ruling on lawsuits alleging Georgia’s redistrict­ing discrimina­ted against Black voters in violation of the Voting Rights Act.

Redrawn districts and a later primary would further inflame a high-stakes election year, drawing out contentiou­s campaigns for governor and Congress.

Redistrict­ing lawsuits are seeking an additional majority-black district after new Gop-drawn maps positioned Republican­s to gain a seat in Congress, where they currently hold an 8-6 advantage in the state’s congressio­nal delegation.

Delaying the primary could potentiall­y allow Jones to address concerns raised by the U.S. Supreme Court’s conservati­ve justices in a redistrict­ing decision earlier this week.

The high court put on hold a lower court ruling that Alabama was required to draw new congressio­nal districts to increase Black voting power, in part because there’s little time to craft new maps before the May 24 primary.

“I could change the whole calendar,” Jones said. “I need to hear all the evidence before I make a decision,” likely soon after court hearings conclude early next week.

Plaintiffs are asking Jones to order the Georgia General Assembly to redraw political maps so that they include more majority-black districts. Georgia’s Black population grew by nearly 500,000 people over the past decade, but lawsuits contend that redistrict­ing left Black voters without opportunit­ies for commensura­te representa­tion.

Attorneys defending the state said redoing redistrict­ing or delaying elections could cause major problems for rushed election officials responsibl­e for accurately updating 7.7 million voter records to ensure everyone is assigned to the correct congressio­nal, state House, state Senate, county commission and school board districts.

Lynn Bailey, a recently retired election director for Richmond County, said it would be difficult to prepare for the primary in time if Georgia’s district lines were redrawn next month.

“There would be chaos, of course. There would be a scramble,” said Bailey, a witness for the state. “We would work as hard as we could to make these timelines work.”

Other county election directors testified for the plaintiffs that if the primary were delayed, they’d have more time to run a smooth primary before the general election Nov. 8.

Fulton County Election Director Richard Barron said there’s a danger that voters could feel disenfranc­hised if redistrict­ing doesn’t give them adequate opportunit­ies for representa­tion.

“That can affect participat­ion if voters feel the process isn’t fair,” Barron testified.

Election directors have experience adjusting to election delays. In 2020, the state’s presidenti­al primary was postponed twice because of the coronaviru­s pandemic before it finally took place in June.

“It would be difficult, but as election officials, we are accustomed to getting a lot of things done in a short amount of time,” Muscogee County Election Director Nancy Boren said. “Additional time is always a good thing to have.”

The plaintiffs said the May 24 primary could be delayed as late as July 26 and still leave election officials enough time to prepare ballots, test voting machines and meet deadlines to send absentee ballots to overseas and military voters before the general election.

County election officials had previously asked the General Assembly to move the primary back a month because of a tight redistrict­ing timeline. The secretary of state’s office set a Feb. 18 deadline for counties to update voters’ informatio­n to reflect their new districts, and candidates must file to run for office the week of March 7.

A resolution that election officials passed at the August meeting of the Georgia Associatio­n of Voter Registrati­on and Elections Officials sought the delay, but legislator­s never considered a bill to change the election date.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/AJC 2021 ?? State Sen. Elena Parent, D-atlanta, speaks against SB 2 EX, newly drawn congressio­nal maps, in a special session Nov. 19 at the Georgia State Capitol.
HYOSUB SHIN/AJC 2021 State Sen. Elena Parent, D-atlanta, speaks against SB 2 EX, newly drawn congressio­nal maps, in a special session Nov. 19 at the Georgia State Capitol.

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