The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Zuckerbuck­s’ election money ban advances

Bill would bar private donations to county election offices.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

Republican lawmakers advanced a bill Wednesday that would ban private donations to local Georgia election offices, a reaction to millions of dollars that have mostly been contribute­d to Democratic-run counties.

The House Government­al Affairs Committee voted along party lines 8-6 to approve Senate Bill 222, putting it on track for final votes in the state House and Senate.

The bill follows an outcry from conservati­ve groups after Dekalb County accepted $2 million in January from the U.S. Alliance for Election Excellence, a project of the Center for Tech and Civic Life, which was funded by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.

The money was meant to support Dekalb’s operating budget and upgrade office facilities, according to the county’s grant applicatio­n, but skeptics of “Zuckerbuck­s” say funding from nonprofits could influence the outcome of elections.

“I don’t believe that people give money for elections that don’t have a desired outcome or effect,” Ginger Bradshaw, a Fulton County

poll manager, told a subcommitt­ee Tuesday. “I think we need to outlaw all outside money for elections.”

Dekalb Election Board Chairwoman Dele Lowman Smith said county election offices need financial support beyond taxpayer funds

to help pay for staff, polling places and equipment during high-turnout elections.

“To suggest that we cut off opportunit­ies for people to exercise their right to participat­e in democracy in order to save some money is offensive, and it is anti-democratic,” Lowman Smith said.

The Center for Tech and Civic Life previously gave $45 million to 43 Georgia counties in the 2020 election year, with 26 of those counties supporting Republican Donald Trump and 17 of them backing Democrat

Joe Biden.

Democratic-leaning counties in metro areas received the bulk of the money, taking in 94% of donations, according to tax records compiled by the Capital Research Center, an organizati­on that focuses on how nonprofits spend money on politics. Fulton County received the largest amount of money, followed by Dekalb, Gwinnett, Cobb and Clayton counties in metro Atlanta.

“What’s happening is certain individual­s selectivel­y give to some communitie­s

and ignore others,” said state Sen. Max Burns, a Republican from Sylvania and sponsor of the bill.

Defenders of nonprofit donations say they were essential for election operations since they started during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The money paid for items including equipment to process mail ballots, protective gear for election workers, elections staffing, absentee ballot postage costs and voter outreach.

“We want to have fair elections. We want them to be honest,” said state Rep. Rhonda Burnough, a Democrat from Riverdale. “But I don’t think it’s fair to keep giving all these responsibi­lities and all these things that elections workers have to figure out but there’s no more money for them.”

Georgia’s voting law passed two years ago limited nonprofit contributi­ons but didn’t shut them off entirely. The law, Senate Bill 202, prohibited direct contributi­ons to county election offices while still allowing county government­s to solicit grants on their behalf.

This year’s legislatio­n would close that loophole and require Dekalb to repay the $2 million it received. Democratic legislator­s and an attorney for the General Assembly said passing that kind of retroactiv­e law could be unconstitu­tional since it was legal at the time Dekalb received the money.

Money could still be donated from nonprofit organizati­ons to the state government. The State Election Board has proposed a plan to distribute outside funding to counties.

Under the bill, violations of restrictio­ns on outside funding would become a felony punishable by at least a year in prison and a $10,000 fine.

Twenty-four states restrict use of private funds for election offices, according to the Capital Research Center.

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM ?? Members of the House Government­al Affairs Committee vote to pass election funding bill SB 222 at the Paul D. Coverdell Legislativ­e Office Building in Atlanta on Wednesday.
ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM Members of the House Government­al Affairs Committee vote to pass election funding bill SB 222 at the Paul D. Coverdell Legislativ­e Office Building in Atlanta on Wednesday.
 ?? ?? Sen. Max Burns, R-sylvania, is the sponsor of Senate Bill 222.
Sen. Max Burns, R-sylvania, is the sponsor of Senate Bill 222.

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