The Standard Journal

Raffensper­ger calls for Ga. constituti­onal amendment aimed at noncitizen­s voting

- By Dave Williams Capitol Beat News Service

ATLANTA — Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger called on the General Assembly Wednesday, Aug. 11, to pass a constituti­onal amendment prohibitin­g non-U.S. citizens from voting in state elections. While such a prohibitio­n already exists in Georgia law, Raffensper­ger pointed to several other states that are allowing noncitizen­s to vote.

The Vermont legislatur­e overrode a veto by Gov. Phil Scott last year that paved the way for noncitizen­s to vote in two cities’ municipal elections. Noncitizen­s already can vote in municipal elections in San Francisco and nine Maryland cities.

Two cities in Massachuse­tts have passed resolution­s calling for noncitizen­s to vote there, and proposals for noncitizen voting were introduced recently in New York City and in the states of Washington and Illinois.

“Only American citizens should be voting in our elections,” Raffensper­ger said Wednesday, Aug. 11. “That’s why I’m calling on the General Assembly to act and pass a constituti­onal amendment ensuring this is the standard for generation­s to come.”

A constituti­onal amendment aimed at keeping noncitizen­s from voting likely would gain strong support from Republican voters in Georgia.

Raffensper­ger alienated many of those voters last year when he refused to go along with efforts by former President Donald Trump to overturn Democrat Joe Biden’s narrow victory in Georgia. Trump urged Raffensper­ger in a telephone call to “find” him the votes necessary to carry the Peach State.

Since then, Trump has endorsed U.S. Rep. Jody Hice’s Republican primary challenge of Raffensper­ger in next year’s race for secretary of state. Former Alpharetta Mayor David Belle Isle also is seeking the GOP nomination.

A constituti­onal amendment similar to Raffensper­ger’s proposal failed in the state Senate in March of last year amid opposition from minority Democrats. Constituti­onal amendments require twothirds votes to pass the Georgia House and Senate.

 ??  ?? Brad Raffensper­ger
Brad Raffensper­ger

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