East Cobb Republicans vote for Ga. elections overhaul bill

Cobb absentee ballots

UPDATED:

The Georgia Senate approved SB 202 in a 34-20 party line vote. Republican State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick voted in favor, and the bill has been signed into law by Gov. Brian Kemp.

ORIGINAL STORY:

The four Republicans representing East Cobb in the Georgia House voted in favor of a bill on Thursday that would make sweeping changes to state elections laws.

It’s one of two omnibus elections bills that were up for votes in the Georgia General Assembly, with the 2021 legislative session drawing to a close.

Both bills, written by Republican lawmakers, would add identification requirements for mailed ballots, restrict the use of absentee ballot drop boxes, require more advanced voting across the state and shorten runoff elections.

The legislature also has oversight of proposed changes to election rules by the Secretary of State and state elections board.

Provisions in initial bills to scrap no-excuse absentee voting and Sunday voting were taken out of the omnibus bills, called the Election Integrity Act of 2021.

The House vote on SB 202 Thursday (you can read it here) was 100-75, along mostly partisan lines. GOP Reps. John Carson, Sharon Cooper, Matt Dollar and Don Parsons, who represent East Cobb districts, voted with the majority.

The only Democrat with an East Cobb constituency, Mary Frances Williams, voted against.

In Cobb County, 16 drop boxes were located around the county for absentee ballots. But the legislation would limit those drop boxes to early voting locations only while the polls are open.

Also, anyone requesting an absentee ballot would have to do so no later than 11 days before an election, and the Secretary of State would not be able to send out unsolicited absentee ballot applications, as was done in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Another provision of the bill would forbid anyone from providing food and water for people standing in line to vote.

The Senate was scheduled to take up SB 202 as well as the other omnibus elections bill, HB 531 (you can read it here). There are two legislative days left, with the session set to end March 31.

In a vote on an earlier elections bill, SB 241, Republican State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick of East Cobb was excused. She was only one of three GOP senators who did not co-sponsor the legislation, which was opposed by Republican Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan.

After last year’s elections prompted major wins for Democrats—including the presidential race and both of Georgia’s U.S. Senate races—the Republican-led legislative session has been dominated by elections bills.

In many races, absentee votes went overwhelmingly for Democratic candidates, while Republicans did better with advanced and election-day in-person voting.

Some Republicans charged election fraud, especially in the presidential race, which Democrat Joe Biden won by less than 12,000 votes.

Democrats and voting-rights groups have blasted the omnibus bills as examples of voter suppression.

But Republicans say overhauls are necessary to restore integrity and trust in elections.

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4 thoughts on “East Cobb Republicans vote for Ga. elections overhaul bill”

  1. According to the US Constitution, it is only the legislature of each state – not the governor, not the secretary of state, not big mouths, and not deep pockets – who can change election policies in that state. The governor and the secretary of state both were complicit. Sending out ballots not requested, sending out multiple ballots whether or requested or not, and other irregularities have all been documented.

    I am glad that this bill has passed. I just hope there aren’t any “gotcha”s buried in it. That’s far from a given these days.

    Looking at the number graphs from both November and January, there’s a big jump late at night – for the democrat candidate(s) only. Courts don’t want to touch it for some unknown reason; that does not mean that it didn’t happen.

    Pete, I’m also curious as to how requiring ID to vote is considered voter suppression but requiring ID to buy beer or open a checking account or board a plane is fine. Please explain that to us.

  2. All Americans should want for Georgia Citizens who are legally registered to vote, to actually vote.

    No voter fraud has been proven in Georgia, so claiming to “fix” a problem that simply doesn’t exist is disingenuous.

    It is embarrassing that some of my neighbors believe restricting access to vote from legally registered voters is a valid political technique.
    I’ll be rethinking my political associations.

  3. I want to thank everyone who voted to ensure that each person gets one lawful vote. No more food trucks showing up to buy votes! But I wonder why the author made such a big deal out of party affiliation instead of the issue solved.

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