In
a long-running dispute over Georgia's voting system, the judge
banned use of the paperless voting machines after 2019, but
denied a request to bar them for municipal elections this
November.
The state's "long and twisted saga" of voting systems "is
finally headed towards its conclusion," U.S. District Court
Judge Amy Totenberg wrote in a 153-page ruling.
Georgia, one of five states to use touchscreen machines with no
paper record, has used direct-recording electronic voting
machines since 2002. The machines have drawn criticism from
various advocacy groups and federal agencies, including U.S.
Department of Homeland Security officials.
The state earlier this year ordered a new voting system with
ballot-marking devices, which Secretary of State Brad
Raffensperger has said will be installed in time for the March
24 presidential primary.
Both sides expressed satisfaction with the judge's split ruling,
with Raffensperger accusing critics of using "scare tactics to
try to undermine Georgia elections," and the plaintiffs
crediting the court with prodding the state into action.
The Coalition for Good Governance, a voting-rights group, and
several Georgia voters, filed the lawsuit in 2017.
"This is a big win for all Georgia voters and those working
across the country to secure elections and protect the right to
vote," said Washington-based attorney David Cross who represents
some of the plaintiffs.
Totenberg previously denied a plaintiff's request to force
Georgia to use paper ballots in the 2018 congressional election,
citing the potential for last-minute confusion.
In her latest ruling, Totenberg also ordered the state to
"address significant deficiencies in the voter registration
database" and its ExpressPoll system which is used to check
voters in to their precincts.
During the November election, various problems were reported
with voter registration and the ExpressPoll systems in several
counties.
(Reporting by Peter Szekely in New York; Editing by Richard
Chang)
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