Hundreds of absentee ballots rejected in Atlanta, prompting legal challenge

Authored by thehill.com and submitted by UWCG
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Election officials in a suburban Atlanta county have reportedly rejected hundreds of absentee ballots just weeks before the midterm elections, sparking legal challenges from voting rights advocates.

The Washington Post reported on Tuesday night that data show more than 1,200 ballots have been rejected in Georgia and that Gwinnett County, northeast of Atlanta, has tossed 465 for reasons including signatures that do not match the ones on file, missing addresses and incorrect birth years.

“This is an unprecedented number of disqualifications, and it’s happening in a county where there are a number of contested races that have minority candidates on the ballot,” Andrea Young, executive director of the Georgia chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), told the newspaper, adding that this is not an "isolated" incident.

The Post noted that the ACLU filed a lawsuit against state and local election officials over this issue on Tuesday.

It remains unknown why Gwinnett County, Georgia's second-largest county, is rejecting the most absentee ballots in the state. But voting rights advocates have told the newspaper that a new law regarding information citizens must provide may have caused the problem.

Nonetheless, Stephen Day, the chairman of the county elections board, has said that the board is looking into the matter. In addition, a spokeswoman for Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp told the Post that his office is investigating the problem related to rejected ballots.

The news comes roughly week after a report surfaced revealing that thousands of voter registration forms, mostly from African-American voters, are on hold in Georgia.

Georgia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams (D) and voting rights groups have placed blame on Kemp, who is running as the GOP nominee for governor, for the holds.

But Kemp's office has pushed back hard against the accusations, saying that Abrams and other groups were playing political games.

shaggyscoob on October 17th, 2018 at 14:42 UTC »

Remember when the Civil Rights Act of 1964 required federal over sight of southern election protocols and procedures because everyone knew the racist bigots would do whatever they could to disenfranchise black voters, and then the Republicans recently got rid of those federal over sights and now racist bigots have been doing whatever they want to disenfranchise blacks and whomever else they feel won't vote Republican? I guess all the warnings should have been heeded.

Kalepsis on October 17th, 2018 at 14:03 UTC »

As a Marine Corps veteran, I feel obligated to explain: many of these absentee ballots come from deployed servicemembers. I had to submit a few from Iraq myself. If I had found out that some Republican ass nozzle had decided my vote shouldn't count because of some BS reason like the signature didn't look exactly the same as the one on my registration, I would be FUCKING FURIOUS. My entire extended family would be darkening the doorstep of the Capitol building every day while chanting, "Traitor!" until they fixed it.

To my fellow veteran, and active, servicemembers: you took an oath, just as I did, to defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic. So let me be perfectly clear: any politician, from any party, who willingly subverts the ability of a citizen to legally cast a ballot is a domestic enemy of the Constitution, and should be treated as such.

Edit: thank you for the gold, I appreciate the support. If you have some more money to spend, give it to a non-partisan, non-profit organization to help end corruption and voter suppression, it will make a difference.

charmed_im-sure on October 17th, 2018 at 12:04 UTC »

This happened last time:

In four of the most populous counties in the state, Fulton, Gwinnett, DeKalb and Cobb, Georgians have been forced to wait for over two hours to vote, and in Gwinnett County at least three people collapsed while waiting in line due to heat exhaustion.

Most early voters did not anticipate the long lines, and in fact decided to vote early in hopes of avoiding a lengthy wait. At one of the few polling locations in Fulton County the doors opened over an hour late. While many were undeterred, countless others went home or back to work with the goal of voting on another day. This is not how a democracy is supposed to work.

“We definitely never had a line like this,” Gwinnett County’s communications director, Joe Sorenson, told Atlanta news affiliate WSB-TV. “I think a lot of people are interested in voting in this election cycle.”

Feigning surprise and being wholly unprepared for a large number of voters in this situation is not only inexcusable, but also undermines the fabric of our democracy. While Sorenson is right about the large turnout, he is wrong to imply that this disaster is merely a byproduct of poor planning or a surprisingly overzealous electorate.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/oct/19/early-voting-lines-georgia