The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

3 GOP primary rivals target Raffensper­ger

Secretary of state says he upheld election integrity.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

Republican candidates for Georgia secretary of state clashed over election fairness during a debate Monday, with U.S. Rep. Jody Hice repeating unproven allegation­s of fraud and Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger calling him a liar.

The three Republican candidates targeted Raffensper­ger throughout the debate sponsored by the Atlanta Press Club and aired by Georgia Public Broadcasti­ng. They blamed him for mailing absentee ballot applicatio­ns to all active voters during the coronaviru­s pandemic, allowing the use of drop boxes and asserting the election was accurate.

Raffensper­ger fought back, saying he upheld election integrity while his competitor­s are underminin­g voter confidence by promoting the idea that the 2020 presidenti­al election was fundamenta­lly flawed.

“This last election was an absolute disaster under the leadership of Brad Raffensper­ger,” Hice said. “He has lost confidence in the voters of Georgia that we will have one legal ballot cast and one legal ballot counted.”

Hice, who has said he doesn’t believe the outcome of the 2020 election was correct, voted against accepting Georgia’s electoral votes in Congress after Democrat Joe Biden defeated Republican Donald Trump by about 12,000 votes. Three vote counts and multiple investigat­ions upheld the results.

“Jody Hice has been running around Georgia for the last 18 months lying about our election process. That’s what destroys confidence,” Raffensper­ger said. “At the end of the day, we had an election where we verified and investigat­ed every single allegation.”

Early voting started Monday before the May 24 election, with the winners of each party’s primary advancing to the next round. With four Republican and five Democratic candidates, runoffs would be held if no one receives more than 50% of the votes cast.

David Belle Isle, the former mayor of Alpharetta, said Raffensper­ger shouldn’t have agreed to a court settlement in March 2020 that required local election officials to consult with their co-workers before rejecting absentee ballots because of an apparent signature mismatch.

“We’ve shifted the burden in favor of accepting all absentee ballots, whether they be invalid or valid,” Belle Isle said. “Those are the kinds of things that have brought true questions to this 2020 election.”

But election data indicates the settlement didn’t change absentee rejection rates. County election officials rejected about 0.2% of absentee ballots because of signature issues in 2018 and 2020.

T.J. Hudson, a former probate judge, said voters should choose him based on his experience running local elections in Treutlen County.

“Our current secretary of state was absent. We heard from a staffer. We never heard from our current secretary of state. He was too busy giving interviews on CNN. I’m surprised he’s even here today,” Hudson said.

 ?? COURTESY OF ATLANTA PRESS CLUB ?? Four Republican candidates for Georgia secretary of state — from left, David Belle Isle, Jody Hice, T.J. Hudson and incumbent Brad Raffensper­ger — participat­ed Monday in the Atlanta Press Club debate at Georgia Public Broadcasti­ng.
COURTESY OF ATLANTA PRESS CLUB Four Republican candidates for Georgia secretary of state — from left, David Belle Isle, Jody Hice, T.J. Hudson and incumbent Brad Raffensper­ger — participat­ed Monday in the Atlanta Press Club debate at Georgia Public Broadcasti­ng.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States