Chef José Andrés calls on Coca-Cola to provide food, beverages to voters in Georgia

Authored by thehill.com and submitted by genisis500
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Washington, D.C., chef José Andrés on Saturday called on Coca-Cola to help provide food and beverages to Georgia voters in light of a newly passed law that makes it illegal for people to provide food or water to voters as they wait in lines to cast their ballots.

The chef made his request in a tweet mentioning the beverage company's news Twitter page and its marketing page.

"Dear @CocaCola @CocaColaCo We the People need your help! Will you help me and many more friends, during the 2022 election in Georgia, to feed and water people waiting in line longer that 2 hours, to simply exercise their right to vote?" Andrés wrote.

Dear @CocaCola @CocaColaCo We the People need your help! Will you help me and many more friends, during the 2022 election in Georgia, to feed and water people waiting in line longer that 2 hours, to simply exercise their right to vote? Let’s make sure Democracy is a celebration! — Please wear a mask! Do it for the World please... (@chefjoseandres) March 27, 2021

The new Georgia voting law signed by Gov. Brian Kemp (R) on Thursday has faced outrage from multiple celebrities and legislators. President Biden Joe BidenDemocrats see Georgia as opening salvo in war on voting rights MLB could move All-Star game from Georgia after controversial new voter restrictions Biden fires majority of DHS advisory council members MORE on Friday called the measure "Jim Crow in the 21st century."

“You don't need anything else to know that this is nothing but punitive, designed to keep people from voting. You can't provide water for people about to vote. Give me a break,” he said.

GOP lawmakers who support the law have said that the provision on food and water was included in an effort to prevent the solicitation of votes and electioneering, or influencing voters, and have also noted that it only applies to the area within 150 feet of the polling booth.

UltraRunningKid on March 27th, 2021 at 15:23 UTC »

How about we just don't have long lines?

I don't bring food or water to the polls, because I live in a democracy where it takes 5 minutes to vote on a bad day because all I have to do is walk in and drop off my mail-in ballot.

-The_Gizmo on March 27th, 2021 at 14:38 UTC »

Civil disobedience is the correct response to this outrageous, racist and unconstitutional law. Unjust and unconstitutional laws deserve to be broken repeatedly.

PandableClaw on March 27th, 2021 at 13:37 UTC »

How about tackling the issue of these long lines rather than punishing the people forced to wait in them? Oh right that’s part of the ploy to disenfranchise voters.