Georgia Republicans purge Black Democrats from county election boards
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[December 09, 2021]
By James Oliphant and Nathan Layne
GRIFFIN, Georgia (Reuters) - Protesters
filled the meeting room of the Spalding County Board of Elections in
October, upset that the board had disallowed early voting on Sundays for
the Nov. 2 municipal election. A year ago, Sunday voting had been
instrumental in boosting turnout of Black voters.
But this was an entirely different five-member board than had overseen
the last election. The Democratic majority of three Black women was
gone. So was the Black elections supervisor.
Now a faction of three white Republicans controlled the board – thanks
to a bill passed by the Republican-led Georgia legislature earlier this
year. The Spalding board’s new chairman has endorsed former president
Donald Trump’s false stolen-election claims on social media.
The panel in Spalding, a rural patch south of Atlanta, is one of six
county boards that Republicans have quietly reorganized in recent months
through similar county-specific state legislation. The changes expanded
the party’s power over choosing members of local election boards ahead
of the crucial midterm Congressional elections in November 2022.
The unusual rash of restructurings follows the state's passage of Senate
Bill 202, which restricted ballot access statewide and allowed the
Republican-controlled State Election Board to assume control of county
boards it deems underperforming. The board immediately launched a
performance review of the Democratic-leaning Fulton County board, which
oversees part of Atlanta.
The Georgia restructurings are part of a national Republican effort to
expand control over election administration in the wake of Trump’s false
voter-fraud claims. Republican-led states such as Florida, Texas and
Arizona have enacted new curbs on voter access this year. Backers of
Trump’s false stolen-election claims are running campaigns for secretary
of state - the top election official - in battleground states. And some
Republicans in Wisconsin are seeking to eliminate the state’s bipartisan
election commission and threatening its members with prosecution.
The stakes are high in Georgia, which last year backed a Democrat for
president for the first time since 1992. Its first-term Democratic
Senator Raphael Warnock will be up for reelection in 2022, a contest
that could prove pivotal to which party controls Congress. The
governor’s race next year pits incumbent Republican Brian Kemp against
Trump-endorsed candidate David Perdue in a primary. The winner will
likely face Democrat Stacey Abrams, a voting rights advocate. Both
Warnock and Abrams are Black.
The county board restructurings and statewide voting restrictions,
Democrats and voting-rights groups say, represent the most sweeping
changes in decades to Georgia’s electoral system. Until 2013, Georgia
elections operated under federal oversight to ensure fair participation
for Black voters in this once-segregated Southern state.
Democrats say Republicans are trying to expand their control over
election administration functions that should be nonpartisan. That could
result in suppression of votes, they said, and could give Republicans
control over certification of results, along with recounts and audits of
contested elections.
“We are talking about a normalization of Republican takeovers of local
functions,” says Saira Draper, director of voter protection for the
Georgia Democratic Party.
Republicans say the changes aim to restore public trust in elections
after many problems during the 2020 elections.
"What we want to make sure is that we have election integrity,” said
Butch Miller, the No. 2 Republican in the Georgia Senate, a leading
advocate for Senate Bill 202 and a sponsor of the bill to reconstitute
the Lincoln County election board.
In five of the Georgia counties that restructured election boards -
Troup, Morgan, Pickens, Stephens and Lincoln - the legislature shifted
the power to appoint some or all election board members to local county
commissions, all of which are currently controlled by Republicans.
Previously, the appointments had been split evenly between the local
Democratic and Republican parties, sometimes with other local entities
controlling some appointments. The intent of the old system: To ensure a
politically balanced or nonpartisan board.
In the sixth county, Spalding, the parties still choose two members
each, but the fifth member is now chosen by local judges. (It used to be
decided by a coin flip.) Those judges tend to be politically
conservative; they appointed a white Republican to replace a Black
Democrat on the election board, giving Republicans a 3-2 majority.
In Morgan County, the majority-Republican county commission
reconstituted its election board, ousting two outspoken Black Democrats.
In Troup County, a Black Democratic member claims the board shake-up was
aimed at ousting her after she fought to increase voting access.
Reuters could not determine the exact split of Democrats and Republicans
in the five counties that handed control to county commissions before
and after their restructurings. That’s because board members’ party
affiliation is not public information in Georgia, and board
representatives declined to identify their allegiances.
RESTRICTING ACCESS
The county election boards have broad authority over voter access, such
as polling locations and early-voting procedures. They also have
considerable sway over post-election provisional-ballot tallies, audits
and recounts.
Reconstituted boards in two of the six counties have already moved to
restrict voting access. In addition to Spalding’s termination of Sunday
voting, Lincoln County has proposed consolidating its seven precincts
into one voting center, which critics say would discourage voting by
people traveling from remote areas. Proponents say it would make voting
more efficient and secure. The proposal is set for a vote on Thursday.
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Yoshunda Jones, a local activist who protested the elimination of
Sunday voting, holds up a sign in Spalding County, Georgia, U.S.,
October 12, 2021. REUTERS/Jim Oliphant
In Lincoln County, the new law removes appointments by political
parties and gives the Republican-led county commission discretion to
appoint the board's three-member majority. County Republicans say
the changes are meant to comply with a 2018 state Supreme Court
ruling, which dictated that private entities cannot appoint members
to government bodies. That decision, however, involved boards of
ethics, not elections, and many other Georgia counties continue to
allow political-party appointments to election boards.
The changes come in the wake of Trump’s false claims of election
fraud. Trump won Spalding County with 60% of the 2020 vote. But his
margin of victory declined by 4 percentage points from 2016 as
turnout among Black voters jumped 20% in a county where the
population is 35% black.
Trump supporters rifled through the dumpsters behind Spalding’s
election office, looking for tossed ballots. None were found. Others
demanded to watch the vote-counting. Sheriff’s deputies had to
escort election workers to their cars. In Georgia and nationwide,
some Trump supporters have threatened election officials with
violence.
With conservative judges now choosing the county election board’s
fifth member, the previous fifth member, Vera McIntosh, a Black
Democrat, has been ousted. She was replaced by James Newland, who is
also vice-chair of the county Republican Party. In September, he
voted to end Sunday voting.
The board’s new chair is Ben Johnson, a former official of the
county Republican party. Johnson declined to comment on his social
media posts endorsing Trump’s false voter-fraud claims. He would not
answer questions about whether he acknowledged that Biden won the
2020 election fairly.
McIntosh, the ousted Democrat, called the changes a “power grab” by
local Republicans who wanted to “go back and prove the ‘Big Lie’ was
real,” referring to Trump’s election-fraud claims.
“They wanted control,” she said. “They got control.”
The law restructuring Spalding’s board also required the elections
supervisor to live in the county, a change that forced out the
incumbent supervisor, Marcia Ridley. Two other Black Democrats on
the board quit: Margaret Bentley and Glenda Henley, who cited
objections to the law and harassment from Trump supporters.
Henley said the board’s meetings were increasingly attended by Trump
supporters crying fraud. She called the tensions “exhausting” and
said: “I have never been afraid in this town, but I am now.”
The restructured board still includes two Democrats, one of whom is
Black.
Republican state representative David Knight from Spalding, who
co-sponsored a bill to reconstitute the board, said the changes had
nothing to do with race or partisanship. They aimed, he said, "to
restore the integrity of our election board and voter confidence."
On Election Day in 2020, voting machines malfunctioned in all 18
precincts, resulting in long waits. Republican Secretary of State
Brad Raffensperger called for Ridley’s resignation, and the
Republican-controlled State Election Board referred her handling of
the problems to the state attorney general, who has to date not
taken any action.
Ridley denies any mismanagement, saying her staff “worked hard to
ensure that no voter got disenfranchised and all were able to vote.”
FREE AND FAIR?
In western Georgia’s Troup County, the Republican-controlled county
commission now appoints all election board members, a power
previously shared by three cities and the two political parties.
Lonnie Hollis, one of two Black female members, will leave the board
at year-end. Hollis, who has served since 2013, said the
restructuring was aimed at unseating her because she fought to
increase voter access. Her efforts included advocating for the first
voting location in a predominantly Black church in the county, which
she said has multiple precincts in predominantly white churches.
Patrick Crews, the Republican chairman of Troup County
commissioners, denied Hollis was targeted for removal.
“Our goal is to be inclusive and appoint members who are concerned
about having fair and honest elections,” Crews said.
In Morgan County, two Black Democrats on the board, Helen Butler and
Avery Jackson, were removed after the new law eliminated
political-party appointments and handed appointment power to the
Republican-dominated commission. Butler and Jackson sought
reappointments but were denied.
The commission chair, Philipp von Hanstein, did not respond to a
comment request.
Butler has long advocated for voting rights and social justice.
Testifying before a special U.S. Senate subcommittee in July, she
said she was ousted for fighting the closure of polling locations
and advocating for ballot drop boxes.
Butler warned that the restructurings could “enable members of the
majority party to overturn election results they do not like."
(Reporting by James Oliphant and Nathan Layne; editing by Soyoung
Kim and Brian Thevenot)
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