Georgia's governor signed 'Jim Crow' voting bill under painting of a slave plantation

Authored by theguardian.com and submitted by 12FAA51
image for Georgia's governor signed 'Jim Crow' voting bill under painting of a slave plantation

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As a photo of the Georgia governor, Brian Kemp, circulated around the internet, showing the politician signing the sweeping voting restrictions bill while surrounded by other white, male politicians, some Twitter users homed in on a previously undetected detail.

The Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch created a Twitter thread about a painting of a Georgia plantation that is hanging behind Kemp in the photograph. Writing about the history of the Callaway plantation in Wilkes county, Georgia, Bunch said the place depicted “thrived because of the back-breaking labor of more than 100 slaves who were held in cruel human bondage”.

The columnist, who later published an op-ed about the discovery, said the symbolism of Kemp signing a bill that Joe Biden has referred to as “Jim Crow in the 21st century” is no coincidence.

The 98-page Election Integrity Act of 2021 has garnered criticism for the additional ID requirements it has added to absentee voting, and making it a crime for many volunteers to hand out water or food within 150 feet of polling precincts.

The practice of handing out food and water became popular as a method of keeping exhausted voters in line at precincts where wait times can span hours. The law also places drop boxes inside voting sites. These drop boxes, which have been in place since last year, will only be accessible during early voting hours instead of 24/7.

1. You've probably seen this picture of Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp and his gaggle of white men signing the state's voter suppression law -- the new, new Jim Crow. But there's a shocking angle to this story that you haven't heard. Sit down for this one... pic.twitter.com/edHPmyeoiu — Will Bunch Sign Up For My Newsletter (@Will_Bunch) March 26, 2021

“Brian Kemp and his white henchmen have created an image for our times, in working to continue a tradition of inhumanity and white supremacy that now spans centuries, from the human bondage that took place behind the placid scenery of Brickhouse Road in Wilkes county, to the suppression now hidden behind a phony facade of ‘voter integrity’. This legacy is a crime against humanity, and it cannot stand,” Bunch tweeted.

The imagery garnered outrage from other people on Twitter, too.

The signing of the Georgia Voter Suppression law yesterday was done under the backdrop of Callaway Plantation in Georgia. Having a bunch of white men under a plantation signing a massive voter suppression bill lets everyone know EXACTLY what they want to have happen. https://t.co/QeXMoPqXQj — ProfB (@AntheaButler) March 26, 2021

Mounted behind white enslavers’ descendants signing a law to make it hard for Black people to vote is Callaway Plantation, a concentration camp where Callaways forced 319 Black Georgians to work free and build southern wealth that gave these men power they’re trying to maintain. pic.twitter.com/kSvFmOF1gM — Uju Anya (@UjuAnya) March 26, 2021

Thursday’s signing of the law also garnered criticism after a Democratic representative, Park Cannon, was arrested for knocking on the office door as Kemp signed the bill in a closed-door ceremony.

wlouvier777 on March 29th, 2021 at 01:26 UTC »

Sorry, I haven't read the bill. But what happens if Joe Voter arrives in the voting line with a couple dozen bottles of water and, while advancing in line over an hour or two, starts sharing his water with those near him. Maybe even his neighbors pass some bottles up and down the line. Do the cops start arresting voters denying them their Constitutional right to vote? Or is this just a citation? Or are those in line exempt?

keetykeety on March 28th, 2021 at 21:57 UTC »

I keep seeing the water prohibition being mentioned.

What bears repeating are the other provisions like ballot drop-off boxes being located now inside the early voting site, thus unavailable to voters outside hours of operation and in the last few days of the election.

Also state election boards now being allowed to take over and replace county election offices

Redditloser147 on March 28th, 2021 at 18:30 UTC »

Is it really that surprising that a racist would sign his racist bill under a painting of racist American institution? This is what’s called appealing to your base of racists.