Georgia Republicans Secure Another Victory in Their Voter Purge – New York Magazine
2018 Georgia gubernatorial candidate and Fair Fight Georgia founder Stacey Abrams. Photo: Cheriss May/NurPhoto/Getty Images
Georgia will not reinstate 98,000 voters who had their registrations purged on December 16, marking another victory for state Republicans whove spent years shrouding their efforts to winnow the electorate in the guise of electoral integrity. A federal judge ruled late last week that it wasnt in his purview to block the states decision, adding that the plaintiffs who challenged the purge had failed to show they were likely to prove its unconstitutionality, according to the Washington Post.
After Georgia secretary of state Brad Raffensperger de-registered more than 300,000 voters earlier this month, Fair Fight Georgia, the voting-rights organization founded by 2018 Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, challenged the deletion of 120,000 on the basis that those voters had their rights stripped owing to capriciously defined inactivity meaning they either hadnt voted or made contact with state election officials, such as responding to mailers, for three years, then failed to vote in the two subsequent federal elections.
Fair Fight Georgias challenge alone prompted the secretary of states office to voluntarily reinstate 22,000 registrations later that same week. The fate of the rest hinged on a pending lawsuit filed by the organization, which argues that Georgias use it or lose it approach to voter-roll maintenance was so overzealous as to be unconstitutional. A law signed in April by Governor Brian Kemp extended the inactivity threshold from three years to five. Fair Fight Georgia argued that this more generous standard should apply retroactively to newly purged voters whod been marked inactive under the previous law. Judge Steve C. Joness decision not to stop Raffensperger means that the remaining 98,000 inactives will still be unable to vote unless they reregister possibly giving Republicans a decisive advantage in the upcoming 2020 elections.
Joness ruling was the latest in an ongoing voting-rights battle in Georgia, which has increasingly been regarded as a potential 2020 swing state. Though Republican Brian Kemp prevailed over Democrat Stacey Abrams to win the governorship in 2018, he did so by the narrowest margin for a Republican in nearly 20 years, and only after overseeing nearly a decade of aggressive voter-suppression measures as secretary of state.
Kemps enforcement of Americas most expansive array of state-level suppression regulations including voter-ID laws, proof-of-citizenship requirements, purges, polling-site closures, and cuts to early voting and rejection of federal help after Georgias notoriously glitchy digital voting machines were shown to be easily hacked drew condemnation. His actions were part of a trend in Republican-governed states whose leaders grew emboldened after the Supreme Courts decimation of the Voting Rights Act in 2013. Suddenly free from the burden of having to get federal preclearance before changing their voting laws, states with long histories of racist restrictions on the franchiselike Georgia and others, largely in the South pursued a barely concealed effort to make it harder for constituencies that tend to vote Democratic to cast their ballots, particularly black people, Latinos, young people, and poor people.
The Raffensperger era has seen a loosening of some of these restrictions in the form of an extended inactivity threshold, the return of paper ballots (while still keeping the digital machines), and wider availability of early voting and vote-by-mail options. But the costs of suppression continue to reverberate. An analysis last year from American Public Media found that targets of then-Secretary Kemps purges were significantly more likely to live in Democratic precincts, with close to 47 percent living in precincts that Abrams carried by at least ten points in 2018. An analysis earlier this month from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution determined that if Kemp hadnt overseen the closure or relocation of nearly half of the states precincts and polling sites between 2012 and 2018, anywhere from 54,000 and 85,000 more voters wouldve cast ballots in the gubernatorial election that Kemp ended up winning. There are counterarguments to this claim research in other states suggests that such closures tend to be offset by early-voting options, which Georgia has. But the victims remain unaltered: According to the AJCs analysis, Kemps closures and relocations were 20 percent more likely to be prohibitive for black voters than their white counterparts.
The difficulty in determining precisely how impactful suppressive measures like Georgias are lies in how their effects reveal themselves primarily in retrospect. Republicans cannot legally bar black people from voting, at least not statedly. But they can ensure that the path to the ballot box is littered with enough administrative confusion and logistical inconveniences that it makes the process close to unnavigable for people whose lives are already marked by precariousness like a lack of access to reliable transportation, steady housing, or the ability to circumnavigate work obligations in order to vote. These deficits tend to afflict black people and poor people disproportionately. All Republicans have to do to reap the spoils is watch the speed bumps theyve implemented take effect and their fallout reveal themselves in the results of the elections that follow or the findings of subsequent data analyses.
Equally difficult to parse is how many of these speed bumps are determinative. In Georgia, they seem to have mostly assured what was already the likely outcome in 2018. The states electorate is still majority white, and that white majority is still mostly conservative, so Kemp had a good chance of winning regardless. The AJC also found that, even though Kemps precinct closures and poll-site relocations may have reduced that years electorate by 1.2 to 1.8 percentage points (Abrams lost the election by only 1.4), his opponent still wouldve needed upwards of 80 percent of those absent votes to claim victory an unlikely prospect.
But the shifting partisan makeup of some of the states biggest metropolitan areas, like Atlanta, suggest that even if such measures didnt alter the outcome of 2018, theyll play a crucial role in future elections. An electorate trimmed to the GOPs liking is more likely to determine outcomes in a state where Republicans are winning by narrow margins than where their victories are already more or less assured. But even as Judge Joness ruling is a boon for Republicans seeking to prevail in Georgia in 2020, it more egregiously advances the idea that the right to vote applies only to people who exercise it with some arbitrary degree of regularity. The particulars of that degree have been devised in Georgia by a party that wants fewer black people and poor people to vote. Its the mark of a party whose definition of electoral integrity hews increasingly toward any measure that lets it become a minority and still win.
Daily news about the politics, business, and technology shaping our world.
Continued here:
Georgia Republicans Secure Another Victory in Their Voter Purge - New York Magazine
- The first splits are emerging in Trumps new Republican party - The Telegraph - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- What's next for this popular Republican governor after he leaves office? - Fox News - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- Republican Bill To End The Department Of Education Introduced - Forbes - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- Im President of the Harvard Republican Club. Being Republican at Harvard Has Never Been Better. - Harvard Crimson - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- Virginias likely Republican nominee for governor reflects on her priorities, reentry into politics - WTOP - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- Republican launches Assembly bid in 36th district - New Jersey Globe | New Jersey Politics - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- Democrats no longer 'party of the people' as Trump transforms Republican Party: NY Times analyst - Fox News - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- This week in Bidenomics: The Republican economy takes off - Yahoo Finance - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- Trump's Republican Party is increasingly winning union voters. It's a shift seen in his labor pick - The Associated Press - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Column: With veto power back, N.C. Democrats have restored a safeguard against Republican extremism - The Daily Tar Heel - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- House Republican Bills Deeply Cut Programs That Help Low-Income People and Underserved Communities - Center on Budget and Policy Priorities - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Letter: What does the Republican Party stand for? - INFORUM - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Meet the Republican and Democratic senators of the 119th Congress - The Washington Post - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Trumps agenda will face hurdles in Congress, despite the Republican trifecta of winning the House, Senate and White House - The Conversation - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Congressional Republican Leaders Start to Show Their Hand: Draconian Medicaid Cuts on the Agenda for Next Year - Georgetown Center for Children and... - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Republican blocks promotion of general involved in Afghanistan withdrawal - The Guardian US - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- North Texas Republican wants to zero out the budget for any public university president offering LGBTQ studies - WFAA.com - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Republican Senator on DOJ political interference: I dont think we know that one way or the other - The Hill - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Gov. Newsom announces jobs initiative in California county that flipped to Republican support - CBS News - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Jamelle Bouie: Its a republican form of government, not a monarchy. With explicit intent - St. Paul Pioneer Press - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Trump got a red trifecta in Washington. But will he face any Republican Party pushback? - USA TODAY - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- The Republican and Democratic parties are killing electoral reform across the US - The Guardian - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- Inside the Republican false-flag effort to turn off Kamala Harris voters - The Washington Post - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- Trump, Republican Congress Health Care Proposals Could Pose Risks to Access and Affordability - Center on Budget and Policy Priorities - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- Republican Victory and the Ambience of Information - The New Yorker - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- Republican Leaders Are More Afraid of Trump Than Ever - The Atlantic - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- Pence Urges Republican Senators Not to Confirm R.F.K. Jr., Citing His Support of Abortion Rights - The New York Times - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- Republican John Thune of South Dakota is elected the next Senate majority leader - ABC News - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- Dan Newhouse, Republican who voted to impeach Trump, wins reelection - Axios - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- Oregon House Republican leader cites endless drama with his party as reason for departure - OregonLive - November 16th, 2024 [November 16th, 2024]
- What a Republican trifecta will mean for governing - The Economist - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- When is the last time a Republican has won popular vote? Trump would be first in 20 years - USA TODAY - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- Republican sweep in Texas also extended to states appellate courts - The Texas Tribune - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- Six GOP lawmakers poised for power on health care as the Senate flips Republican - STAT - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- Trump wins Alaska, for the 15th consecutive Republican victory in the state - Alaska Beacon - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- California Republican who impeached Trump wins reelection - The Hill - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- Republican Christi Craddick reelected to Railroad Commission, the states oil and gas regulatory agency - The Texas Tribune - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- Nevada on verge of voting Republican for first time in two decades - The Guardian US - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- Inside the Republican victories in suburban New York: 'fed up with one party Democratic rule' - Fox News - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- In Georgia, its Republican vs. Republican as election misinformation spreads - CNN - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- Republican mega-donors asked their employees who they will vote for in survey - The Guardian US - November 8th, 2024 [November 8th, 2024]
- A Unified Republican Congress Would Give Trump Broad Power for His Agenda - The New York Times - October 31st, 2024 [October 31st, 2024]
- The Republican Supreme Court just blessed an illegal voter purge, in Beals v. Virginia Coalition for Immigrant Rights - Vox.com - October 31st, 2024 [October 31st, 2024]
- How Connecticut transformed from a Republican state to among the most Democratic - CT Insider - October 31st, 2024 [October 31st, 2024]
- How attacks on Republican voters became the third rail of partisan politics - Semafor - October 31st, 2024 [October 31st, 2024]
- Democratic Senator tries to swim upstream in increasingly Republican Ohio - Reuters - October 31st, 2024 [October 31st, 2024]
- We have to blow it up: can never-Trumpers retake the Republican party? - The Guardian US - October 31st, 2024 [October 31st, 2024]
- Opinion | A Democratic and a Republican Pollster Agree: This Is the Fault Line That Decides the Election - The New York Times - October 31st, 2024 [October 31st, 2024]
- In Montana, Republican Tim Sheehy Tries to Outrun Jon Tester, and Scrutiny - The New York Times - October 31st, 2024 [October 31st, 2024]
- I was the director of the Michigan Republican Party. I will vote for Kamala Harris. - City Pulse - October 31st, 2024 [October 31st, 2024]
- Polls and prediction markets are signaling a Republican sweep in the election - Fortune - October 31st, 2024 [October 31st, 2024]
- NY Republican in critical House race spent huge sums of campaign cash on steakhouses, booze, Ubers and a foreign hostel - CNN - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- 'Republican voters remain overwhelmingly committed to Trump, whatever he may say or do' - Le Monde - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- Trump and the millionaires: How the Republican Party bet on the very, very rich - Semafor - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- Michigan's election fate will depend on laborers. A Democrat and Republican outline what those workers are looking for. - Business Insider - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- Voters must find Trump unworthy of high office (The Republican Editorials) - MassLive.com - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- Opinion | How Donald Trump Jr. Conquered the Republican Party - The New York Times - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Nothing is more important than your health - Marshalltown Times Republican - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Deciphering the Republican campaigns strategy to win the Latino vote: They speak the same to everyone - EL PAS USA - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Trump has made gains with Latino men. Why they're voting Republican and how Harris is addressing it. - NBC News - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Speaker Mike Johnson fights to save the House Republican majority and his job - NBC News - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Republican lawsuits over overseas and military voting hit setbacks in 2 swing states - NPR - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- History-making Republican who was first and only woman speaker of Ohio House dies - WYSO Public Radio - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- What to know about Republican challenges to overseas and military voting - NPR - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Early-voting data shows Republican reversal appears to be paying off - The Washington Post - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Opinion | How Would Trump Handle Foreign Policy in a Second Term? Two Republican Experts Tell Us. - The New York Times - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Which Republican Might Join a Harris Cabinet? We Asked Around. - The New York Times - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Michigan judge rejects Republican bid to block overseas voters - Reuters - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Georgias Republican secretary of state finds just 20 noncitizens registered to vote out of 8.2 million - CNN - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Republican Early Vote Turnout Is Up In Battleground States - Newsweek - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- A lifelong Republican transitions to a new party, years after gender reassignment surgery - The Associated Press - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Republican Club of Northeast Volusia County donates over $8,000 to Barracks of Hope - Palm Coast Observer and Ormond Beach Observer - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Republican vice-presidential nominee JD Vance to visit Wilmington. Here's what to know - StarNewsOnline.com - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- Column | The most Republican and Democratic cuisines, according to campaign funds - The Washington Post - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- Letters to the Editor: The Republican Partys future is bright, even if Trump loses - Los Angeles Times - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- Dont ignore Republican attacks on the U.S. Constitution | READER COMMENTARY - Baltimore Sun - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- North Carolina Republican pushes back on hurricane misinformation: "Nobody can control the weather" - CBS News - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- Hurricane Milton Will Be Devastating. Republican Lies Are Going to Make It Worse - Vanity Fair - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- How hurricane falsehoods are dividing the Republican Party - The Washington Post - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- Column: Donald Trump seems to think he's losing. Would the Republican Party survive his defeat? - Los Angeles Times - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]