The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fair Fight Action rests its case after calling 52 witnesses.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

Voting rights groups rested their case Wednesday in a trial challengin­g Georgia’s election policies, calling for a federal judge to order changes to voter registrati­on and absentee ballot procedures that hindered some voters.

The plaintiffs in the case, led by Fair Fight Action, told the judge that testimony from 52 witnesses over the past month showed that “exact match” registrati­on rules and absentee ballot cancellati­on practices violate voting laws.

“Without the federal protection of the court, more and more voters will be bur- dened,” said Allegra Lawrence-hardy, the lead attorney for the plaintiffs. “These voter witnesses are the tip of the iceberg.”

The voting rights trial is nearing a conclusion 3½ years after the lawsuit was filed following Democrat Stacey Abrams’ loss to Republi- can Brian Kemp in the 2018 election for governor. Next, the defense will present its side before the judge rules.

Only at the close of their case Wednesday did the plaintiffs reveal their proposals for how the judge could correct voting problems in Georgia.

“Exact match” registrati­on rules, which require ID verificati­on for minor inconsis

tencies in a name’s spelling, should be eliminated, Lawrence-hardy said. All voters must show ID anyway, and she said “exact match” creates an unnecessar­y burden that has a disproport­ionate racial impact because 70% of flagged voters are Black.

“The disparity, frankly, is outrageous,” Lawrence-hardy said.

She said citizenshi­p verifica- tion should be improved after an audit by the secretary of state’s office found that 63% of voters flagged as potential noncitizen­s were actually U.S. citizens. The plaintiffs said registrati­ons should be checked against the federal Systematic Alien Verificati­on for Entitle- ments program.

In addition, the plaintiffs are seeking improved train- ing to ensure absentee voters who decide to instead vote in person can cast ballots, and

they requested more rigorous methods when identifyin­g potential felons who are ineligible to vote in Georgia.

But the defendants will argue in court Thursday that the plaintiffs haven’t proved their case. They plan to ask U.S. District Judge Steve Jones for a verdict in their favor.

Josh Belinfante, an attorney for the secretary of state’s office, said at the beginning of the trial that plaintiffs wouldn’t succeed in their effort to show that “democracy failed.”

“The evidence will estab- lish, however, that plain- tiffs fall short of proving that hypothesis,” Belinfante said during an opening statement last month. “There is no evidence to support the claim of disenfranc­hisement by Georgia election officials.”

During 15 days of testi- mony, 24 voters or poten

tial voters testified, along with poll watchers, church leaders, expert witnesses and election officials. The trial also included deposition testimony from Gov. Brian Kemp, who explained his prior concerns about Democrats’ minority voter turnout efforts.

Jones also is considerin­g another issue: whether Georgia’s voting law passed last year violated his previous order from 2018 that absentee ballots couldn’t be rejected because of an incorrect or missing date of birth. He ruled at the time that birth dates alone weren’t a valid criteria for invalidati­ng ballots.

Georgia law changed last year through Senate Bill 202 to restore dates of birth to the informatio­n voters must provide on absentee ballot envelopes. Jones said he plans to rule on that topic today.

 ?? COURTESY OF JENN FINCH ?? Allegra Lawrence-hardy, an attorney for Fair Fight Action, speaks outside the Richard B. Russell Federal Building in Atlanta on April 11. The voting rights trial is nearing a conclusion 3½ years after the lawsuit was filed.
COURTESY OF JENN FINCH Allegra Lawrence-hardy, an attorney for Fair Fight Action, speaks outside the Richard B. Russell Federal Building in Atlanta on April 11. The voting rights trial is nearing a conclusion 3½ years after the lawsuit was filed.

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