Walker County Messenger

Raffensper­ger calls for doing away with general election runoffs

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA — Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger is asking the General Assembly to end general election runoffs in Georgia.

Raffensper­ger’s proposal, released Wednesday, Dec. 14, comes just more than a week after Democratic U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock defeated Republican challenger Herschel Walker in a runoff after neither candidate received a majority of the votes in the November general election.

“Georgia is one of the only states in the country with a general election runoff,” Raffensper­ger said. “We’re also one of the only states that always seems to have a runoff. … No one wants to be dealing with politics in the middle of their family holiday.”

Georgia lawmakers have made changes to the vote threshold general election candidates must meet to avoid runoffs since 1968, when voters approved a constituti­onal amendment requiring the governor’s race to go to a runoff if none of the candidates received a majority of votes in the general election.

After Democratic incumbent Sen. Wyche Fowler lost to Republican challenger Paul Coverdell in a 1992 runoff, the General Assembly’s Democratic majority reduced the 50%-plus-one vote requiremen­t to avoid a runoff to 45%. That worked out for the Democrats four years later when the late Max Cleland won the seat of retiring Sen. Sam Nunn with more than 45% of the vote but less than 50%.

Republican­s responded to that 1996 loss when the GOP won control of the legislatur­e in 2004. During their first legislativ­e session in power, Republican­s changed the requiremen­t back to the 50%-plus-one threshold.

Some second-place finishers in the general election have gone on to turn the tables and win the runoff, including Coverdell. But this year, Warnock finished first in both the general election and the runoff, lending credence to the argument that general election runoffs are a waste of taxpayer dollars.

Raffensper­ger said the four-week turnaround between the general election and runoff this year — about

half of the gap between the general election and runoff two years ago — made it particular­ly difficult for county elections offices to execute the runoff.

The shorter time frame this year also resulted in fewer early voting days, prompting complaints from Democrats.

Raffensper­ger said the

General Assembly could choose from a wide list of options as an alternativ­e to general election runoffs. Those include eliminatin­g or reducing the 50%-plusone vote threshold, or going with ranked-choice voting, which would allow voters to rank their choices according to preference.

 ?? ?? Brad Raffensper­ger
Brad Raffensper­ger

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