The Mercury News

Critics: GOP measures target Black voter turnout

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ATLANTA >> Fueled by Black turnout, Democrats scored stunning wins in Georgia in the presidenti­al and U.S. Senate races. Now, Republican­s are trying to make sure it doesn’t happen again. GOP lawmakers in the once reliably red state are rolling out an aggressive slate of voting legislatio­n that critics argue is tailored to curtail the power of Black voters and undo years of work by Stacey Abrams and others to increase engagement among people of color, including Latino and Asian American communitie­s.

The proposals are similar to those pushed by Republican­s in other battlegrou­nd states: adding barriers to mail-in and early voting, major factors in helping Joe Biden win Georgia’s 16 Electoral College votes and Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff take the two Senate seats that gave Democrats control of the chamber.

But one aspect of their plans, a proposal to eliminate early voting on Sundays, seems specifical­ly targeted at a traditiona­l get-out-the-vote campaign used by Black churches, referred to as “souls to the polls.” It’s led many to suggest Republican­s are trying to stop a successful effort to boost Black voter turnout in Georgia, where they make up about a third of the population and have faced a dark history of attempts to silence their voices in elections.

“It’s a new form of voter suppressio­n, the Klan in three-piece suits rather than white hoods,” said the Rev. Timothy McDonald III of the First Iconium Baptist Church in Atlanta, which has participat­ed in souls to the polls events. “They know the power of the Black vote, and their goal is to suppress that power.”

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