Election Hijinks Thread: GOP about to steal election in GA

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It isn’t often you get to watch an election being stolen in real time, but that might be what is happening right now in Georgia.

When it comes to the nationwide, comprehensive, carefully planned Republican effort to suppress the votes of people who are likely to vote Democratic, particularly racial minorities, there is a menu of techniques Republicans employ — voter ID laws, voter purges, limiting early voting, closing polling places in heavily minority neighborhoods, and racial and partisan gerrymandering.

But what Brian Kemp is doing right now is truly unique.

Kemp, the Republican nominee for governor, is locked in an extremely tight race with Democrat Stacey Abrams. He also happens to be the secretary of state, the official in charge of all elections in Georgia. You might expect him to step down or recuse himself from overseeing his own election in the interest of fairness and public confidence that the fix is not in, but that’s not how Republicans do things. Kemp isn’t just overseeing the process, he’s apparently also doing everything he can to keep as many Democrats as possible from the polls in November.

Ben Nadler reports:
Two main policies overseen by Kemp have drawn criticism and legal challenges: Georgia’s “exact match” registration verification process and the mass cancellation of inactive voter registrations.

According to records obtained from Kemp’s office through a public records request, [Marsha] Appling-Nunez’s application —like many of the 53,000 registrations on hold with Kemp’s office — was flagged because it ran afoul of the state’s “exact match” verification process.

Under the policy, information on voter applications must precisely match information on file with the Georgia Department of Driver Services or the Social Security Administration. Election officials can place non-matching applications on hold.


An application could be held because of an entry error or a dropped hyphen in a last name, for example.

Appling-Nunez says she never saw any notice from Kemp’s office indicating a problem with her application.

An analysis of the records obtained by The Associated Press reveals racial disparity in the process. Georgia’s population is approximately 32 percent black, according to the U.S. Census, but the list of voter registrations on hold with Kemp’s office is nearly 70 percent black.

Who could have predicted such a thing would happen!

We know who: the Republicans in the state legislature who passed the law and the Republican who’s implementing it. In fact, they passed their “exact match” law in 2017 after Kemp settled a lawsuit charging that a previous version of “exact match” was racially discriminatory. Kemp agreed to stop using it, but then the Republican-led legislature stepped in and wrote a new version of it into law so that the suppression could continue.


There’s one more interesting twist to this story. How does Kemp justify his racially discriminatory policy? He says the fact that so many black voters are getting their registrations put on hold is the fault of the New Georgia Project, which seeks to register voters and was founded five years ago by none other than Stacey Abrams. The New Georgia Project, Kemp’s office claims, “did not adequately train canvassers to ensure legible, complete forms.” And sure, black people are getting their registrations held up at much higher rates, but that’s just because of “the higher usage of one method of registration among one particular demographic group.”

Kemp also says that this whole thing is being stirred up by “outside agitators,” which just happens to be the same name segregationists called those campaigning for civil rights during the Jim Crow era. You can be sure that no one in Georgia misunderstands the reference.

We have to keep saying this: Suppressing the votes of Democrats is the whole point of these laws and procedures. Republicans claim to worry about “voter fraud,” and journalists dutifully repeat those claims because when one party says something over and over, you’re supposed to treat it as though it is serious. But everyone knows it’s nonsense. Voter fraud is almost nonexistent, and Republicans aren’t motivated by some deeply held abstract principle about the integrity of elections that they apply whether it helps them or not. It’s just a lie.

It’s also an example of how Republicans, who complain all the time about the stifling hand of big government, use their power to weaponize bureaucracy against people they don’t like. They impose “work requirements” on programs such as Medicaid, forcing recipients to navigate a bureaucratic maze in order to maintain their benefits — and if you make a mistake on a form, you can lose your health insurance. Did someone input an “i” in your name when it’s actually an “l”? Sorry, we’re suspending your registration. Haven’t voted in a couple of elections? We’re purging you from the rolls.

The final and perhaps cruelest piece of this puzzle is that Republicans have closed off the legal avenues for voters to challenge these discriminatory policies. In 2013, the Republican majority on the Supreme Court eviscerated the Voting Rights Act, in a case involving Shelby County, Ala. In a bit of head-spinning illogic, Chief Justice G. Roberts Jr. wrote that “largely because of the Voting Rights Act,” racial discrimination in voting had been greatly reduced, and therefore it was time to gut the Voting Rights Act. As Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg noted in her dissent, destroying the Voting Rights Act because it had succeeded in limiting discrimination was “like throwing away your umbrella in a rainstorm because you are not getting wet.” Because of the Shelby County v. Holder decision, legal challenges to Kemp’s actions are unlikely to succeed.

So we may wind up in Georgia with the same situation we’ve seen over and over again. Republicans gain power, then enact a series of policies and laws to make it harder for Democrats to vote. Democrats undertake a herculean effort to register and turn out voters, but when subsequent elections are extremely close, it turns out that the Republican vote suppression efforts were enough to make the difference.

That could well happen in Georgia, where we could see the race decided by a few thousand votes and tens of thousands of legitimate voters kept from the polls. Abrams has based her strategy on registering and turning out as many Democratic voters as possible, including those who haven’t participated before. Kemp’s strategy involves being the most troglodytic Trumpite he can be — and using the powers of his office to put just enough of a thumb on the scale to ensure his victory.

If Kemp wins, Republicans around the country will celebrate it as further proof of the efficacy of their vote suppression strategy. And knowing that the Supreme Court is likely to endorse whatever new suppression tactics they come up with, they’ll move even more aggressively to restrict access to the ballot.

Tl;dr:

-GOP Gov. candidate Brian Kemp is in a tight Race with Democrat Stacey Abrams
---Kemp is also the Sec. of State, which is the top election official in GA
-----Kemp has refused to recuse himself from overseeing his own election despite the huge conflict of interest

-GA's GOP controlled legislatiure Implemented an “Exact Match” policy to suppress voters
---Exact Match: Information on voter application must be an exact match. A data entry error or typo will put the application on hold. No notification is sent to the applicant to let them know about the error.
---Data analysis shows that Exact Match registrations on hold is 70% black compared to the state’s 32% black population

-A disproportionate amount of stalled applications were from brought in from New Georgia Project, an organization that seeks to register disenfranchised voters.
---New Georgia Project was founded by Abrams, his current opponent, 5 years ago

-The current Federal Supreme Court will probably allow this kind of behavior to continue

This kind of stuff makes me sick. I'm sure the voter-suppression apologists will come in and defend this on some grounds, but I'd rather just the trolls come in and spam the gorilla emoji.
 
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That is disgusting but the sad part is nobody cares that slowly our democracy is being taken from us.
 
Fucked up but there's an alternative explanation. Perhaps Abrams set up the New Georgia Project 5 years ago to facilitate winning the election now.

That was my first thought when I saw that Abrams was running and that his organization was responsible for numerous errors in registration data.

I do believe that the GOP Governor should recuse himself from overseeing the election that he's running in. And I do believe that the "exact match" legislation is being implemented with discriminatory intent, given that the previous version of the program met the same criteria. But I can't ignore the confluence of events around the NGP either.
 
Fucked up but there's an alternative explanation. Perhaps Abrams set up the New Georgia Project 5 years ago to facilitate winning the election now.

That was my first thought when I saw that Abrams was running and that his organization was responsible for numerous errors in registration data.

I do believe that the GOP Governor should recuse himself from overseeing the election that he's running in. And I do believe that the "exact match" legislation is being implemented with discriminatory intent, given that the previous version of the program met the same criteria. But I can't ignore the confluence of events around the NGP either.

I don't understand what the objection around NGP would be. It's just to increase voter turnout, obviously targeted at left-leaning demographics which would obviously help her chances of winning, but that's not really insidious. Increasing civil engagement is a much nobler endeavor than systematic disenfranchisement.

FWIW, the optics really don't look good on this one. Abrams, if elected, would be the first black female governor, and Kemp using terms like "outside agitators" is coded language that's going to invoke pre-segregation politics.
 
I don't understand what the objection around NGP would be. It's just to increase voter turnout, obviously targeted at left-leaning demographics which would obviously help her chances of winning, but that's not really insidious. Increasing civil engagement is a much nobler endeavor than systematic disenfranchisement.

FWIW, the optics really don't look good on this one. Abrams, if elected, would be the first black female governor, and Kemp using terms like "outside agitators" is coded language that's going to invoke pre-segregation politics.
I'm not slightly defending Kemp or the GOP here. I'm sure that they are actively trying to suppress the black vote to win the election.

But if she founded the organization and it is legitimately putting forward numerous registrations with data errors then that reflects on her. I don't think she set up the organization to sneak false registrations past the system. But if your organization isn't crossing its t's and dotting its i's, that's on you, not the GOP.

The alternative is saying that they should overlook data errors in names and such. All that does is reinforce the position of those who allege that the Dem's don't take voter registration seriously so that they, the Dem's, can steal the elections.
 
Can this go immediately to the Supreme Court, or does it have to go through the state system first? Clearly he can't oversee his own election.
 
I'm not slightly defending Kemp or the GOP here. I'm sure that they are actively trying to supress the black vote to win the election.

But if she founded the organization and it is legitimately putting forward numerous registrations with data errors then that reflects on her. I don't think she set up the organization to sneak false registrations past the system. But if your organization isn't crossing its t's and dotting its i's, that's on you, not the GOP.

The alternative is saying that they should overlook data errors in names and such. All that does is reinforce the position of those who allege that the Dem's don't take voter registration seriously so that they, the Dem's, can steal the elections.

Fair enough. The worse part about the exact match laws is that it gives just enough deniability for someone to justify suppressing a vote. The laws seem broadly applied to the point where any application could be stalled. Worse, purposely not notifying the applicant about the error on their application is deliberate to turn away as many voters as possible on election day before they can rectify the situation. Without more information, you can't really determine if NGP is not following due process compared to the population (plausible) or if they are being singled out because it is an easy filter for votes that are likely going towards Kemp's opponent (more plausible).
 
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Can this go immediately to the Supreme Court, or does it have to go through the state system first? Clearly he can't oversee his own election.
Take a guess which way the Supreme Court would side with...
 
Holy shit.

This was worse than I was expecting. And I was expecting some pretty shameful shit.
 
This is beyond reprehensible. I don't really know what can be done as long as Republican voters approve of this behavior.
 
Can this go immediately to the Supreme Court, or does it have to go through the state system first? Clearly he can't oversee his own election.

In an oligarchy anything is possible.
 
Take a guess which way the Supreme Court would side with...
I truly can't imagine this court allowing that. It's just so fundamentally un-American. I don't know what law it violates though.
 
Good. Also lol at you white liberals worshipping black people talk about self hate.
 
Are they gonna get help from Russia this time?
 
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