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Election Deniers Secretly Pushed Rule That Would Make It Easier to Delay Certification of Georgia’s Election Results

propublica.org
submitted
8 mos ago
byjoeschtopolitics

Summary

The Georgia State Election Board passed the rule 3-2. Nationally prominent conservative activists spoke in support of it. The leader of a liberal Washington-based watchdog organization spoke in opposition.

The State Election Board’s Monday meeting comes on the heels of a vote less than two weeks before. The vote empowered county election board members to conduct “reasonable inquiry” into allegations of voting irregularities. That rule did not set deadlines for how long such inquiries might last or describe what they might entail.

Until 2020, the certification of elections was a noncontroversial part of running them. ProPublica has previously reported how these disruptions revealed weaknesses in the nation’s electoral system.

The State Election Board received the proposed rule in April from a former member of the Fulton County elections board. The Election Research Institute is led by Heather Honey, a conservative activist.

Nuriddin eventually withdrew her submission. She would not say why. An almost identical submission was provided to the board at about the same time.

The five-person board, which has four Republicans on it, voted the proposal down unanimously. It offered to have two members work with supporters to refine the rule for future consideration.

In June, a conservative activist resubmitted the rule with only minor updates. In his place, the speaker appointed Janelle King. King is a conservative podcaster and panelist on a Georgia politics TV show.

The six experts listed off numerous scenarios in which small discrepancies that do not impact the outcome of the election regularly occur. According to the experts, election laws across America do not allow minor discrepancies to halt the certification process.

Georgia law says certification of votes is mandatory. Attempts by county board members not to certify votes would prompt interested parties to seek a writ of mandamus.

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8 Comments

3
sometimessober
8 mos ago
Can we just let democracy be?
2
getthatmoneyyo
8 mos ago
It would be nice if there wasn't a group actively fighting it!
2
sometimessober
8 mos ago
Somehow everybody forgot to care about voting down ballot
2
getthatmoneyyo
8 mos ago
Hard not to do when all the media focuses on is who the current idiot at the top is. It's why we're at the point that morons think the president decides gas prices and passes bills
2
practicalmagic
8 mos ago
There should be a way to push back on this, no?
1
joeschOP
8 mos ago
Through the courts and through ensuring that this isn't the state that would determine the election.
1
joseph
8 mos ago
Is this the rule that was snuck in at the final hour and the group of people that broke their own rules by not inviting their Democrat counterparts to the meeting?
2
joeschOP
8 mos ago
That's exactly it. It's also late enough in the game that a legal battle wouldn't be fought until after the election.