New rules regarding election certification in Georgia to get test in
court
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[September 30, 2024]
By KATE BRUMBACK
ATLANTA (AP) — Two controversial new rules passed by Georgia's State
Election Board concerning the certification of vote tallies are set to
face their first test in court this week.
The Republican majority on the State Election Board — made up of three
members praised by former President Donald Trump praised by name at a
recent rally — voted to approve the rules last month. Democrats filed a
legal challenge and argue the rules could be used “to upend the
statutorily required process for certifying election results in
Georgia.”
A bench trial, meaning there is a judge but no jury, is set to begin
Tuesday before Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney.
One of the rules provides a definition of certification that includes
requiring county officials to conduct a “reasonable inquiry” before
certifying results, but it does not specify what that means. The other
includes language allowing county election officials “to examine all
election related documentation created during the conduct of elections.”
A series of recent appointments means Trump-endorsed Republicans have
had a 3-2 majority on the State Election Board since May. That majority
has passed several new rules over the past two months that have caused
worry among Democrats and others who believe Trump and his allies may
use them to cause confusion and cast doubt on the results if he loses
this crucial swing state to Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris in
November's presidential election.
Another rule the board passed more recently requires that poll workers
count the number of paper ballots — not votes — by hand on election
night after voting ends. A separate lawsuit filed by a group headed by a
former Republican lawmaker initially challenged the two certification
rules but was amended last week to also challenge the ballot counting
rule and some others that the board passed.
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and an association of
county election officials had cautioned the state board against passing
new rules so close to the election. They argued it could cause confusion
among poll workers and voters and undermine public trust in the voting
process.
The challenge to the certification rules filed by Democratic groups and
others asks the judge to confirm that election superintendents — a
multi-person election board in most counties — have a duty to certify an
election by the deadline provided in the law and have no discretion to
withhold or delay certification. They ask that it should be declared
invalid if the judge believes either of the rules allows such
discretion.
Lawyers for the State Election Board argue the Democrats are asking the
judge to “declare what is already enshrined in Georgia law,” that county
certification is mandatory and must occur by 5 p.m. the Monday after the
election, or the next day if Monday is a holiday, as it is this year.
They also argue the challenge is barred by the principle of sovereign
immunity and seeks relief that isn't appropriate under the law.
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Georgia's State Election Board members discuss proposals for
election rule changes at the state capitol, Friday, Sept. 20, 2024,
in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)
The challenge was filed by the state and national Democratic
parties, as well as county election board members from counties in
metro Atlanta, most chosen by the local Democratic Party, as well
voters who support Democrats and two Democratic state lawmakers
running for reelection. It was filed against the State Election
Board, and the state and national Republican parties joined the
fight on the board's side.
The Democrats concede in their challenge that the two rules “could
be read not to conflict with Georgia statutes” but they argue “that
is not what the drafters of those rules intended.”
“According to their drafters, these rules rest on the assumption
that certification of election results by a county board is
discretionary and subject to free-ranging inquiry that may delay
certification or render it wholly optional,” they wrote in a court
filing.
They also note that numerous county election officials around the
state have already sought to block or delay certification in recent
elections and “the new rules hand those officials new tools to do so
again in November.”
State lawyers argue that since the argument against the rules is
based on the alleged intent of the people who presented them or the
way some officials could interpret them, rather than on the text of
the rules themselves, the challenge should be thrown out.
State lawyers also argue the Democrats' attempt to have the judge
issue a declaratory judgment is prohibited under sovereign immunity,
which protects state and local governments from being sued unless
they agree to it. The Democrats' lawyers argue this challenge falls
under a carve out provided in state law saying the state has
“specifically consented to be sued and has explicitly waived its
sovereign immunity as to declaratory judgment actions in which the
rules oof its agencies are challenged.”
Lawyers for both sides also invoke a 2006 U.S. Supreme Court ruling
that courts should not change election rules right before an
election.
Lawyers for the Republican groups say prohibiting the enforcement of
the new rules “in the final weeks before voting starts would inject
judicially created confusion,” which the Supreme Court ruling meant
to protect against.
Lawyers for the Democrats say the ruling applies to federal courts,
not state courts, to keep federal courts from intruding in a matter
having to do with state laws. Even if it did apply in this case,
they contend, it would support their arguments because it argues
against longstanding election rules being changed close to an
election.
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