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Stacey Abrams Decries 'Voter Suppression' as Georgia Sees Record Turnout

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Democratic Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams claimed during an interview with MSNBC’s Joy Reid that her state is experiencing voter suppression despite the record primary elections turnout.

Abrams was an outspoken opponent of voter reform legislation passed last year in Georgia that, among other changes, required those applying for mail-in ballots to provide a driver’s license or voter ID number, WXIA-TV reported.

Additionally, ballot drop boxes were moved inside polling locations and only made available during voting hours. Georgia also now prevents local governments from accepting grants from the private sector to aid in conducting elections.

These funds have been dubbed “Zuck bucks” by conservatives, a reference to the over $400 million donated by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan to the Center for Tech and Civic Life in the name of assisting voting during the coronavirus pandemic.

Most of that money in Georgia and beyond went to counties President Joe Biden won in the 2020 election.

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Under its new rules, the Peach State has also increased the minimum number of days of early voting to 17 and allows no-excuse mail-in voting as long as a voter provides an ID number.

In her Monday interview with Abrams, Reid said Georgia had “become ground zero for voter suppression” because of its new election law, Senate Bill 202, which she characterized as “Jim Crow version 2.0.”

“Republicans, with the help from some in the political press, are now using the huge turnout in the primaries so far to push a new big lie: That the record turnout, which is mainly from Republican primary voters, means that Georgia’s suppressive voting law is not suppressive at all,” Reid added.

Headlines from news outlets including The New York Times and The Washington Post noting the high voter turnout appeared on a screen behind the host.

Is Georgia's record turnout proof that Republicans aren't suppressing the vote?

According to a Saturday news release from the Georgia secretary of state’s office, the number of early ballots cast was 857,401, a 168 percent increase from the 2018 gubernatorial primary and a 212 percent increase from the presidential primary in 2020.

That total included 483,149 Republicans and 368,949 Democrats. The GOP had more tightly contested statewide primary races, particularly for governor, U.S. Senate and secretary of state.

As of Thursday, Abrams had received 166,000 more votes running unopposed than both she and her opponent garnered together in the 2018 Democratic primary for governor: approximately 719,000 total ballots compared to 553,000 in 2018.

On the Republican side, about 1.2 million ballots were cast this year versus 608,000 during the last governor’s race.

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Reid asked Abrams to comment on what the high voter turnout means in terms of her claims of voter suppression.

“The equivalent of saying that more people voting means there is no suppression is like telling people that if you get in the water there are no sharks. If more people get in the water, there are fewer sharks,” Abrams answered.

“There’s no correlation there,” the Democrat continued. “Voter suppression is about blocking or impeding certain types of voters from participating in elections.”

“Right now, Republicans have the most competitive elections, but what we also don’t know is what is the mail-in ballot rejection rate? What are the difficulties people are having?” Abrams asked.

The candidate argued that her supporters could still overwhelm the system and overcome what she characterized as impediments to voting put in place by Republicans.

“But to let them off of the hook for what they’ve done simply because they didn’t do it as well as they thought is, I think, nonsensical,” Abrams said.

On Tuesday, Abrams repeated her charge that voter suppression is occurring even amid the high voter turnout on Election Day.

“It is correlation without causation,” she contended. “We know that increased turnout has nothing to do with suppression.”

In other words, SB 202 — even with more early voting days and no-excuse mail-in voting — has not helped voter turnout.


The Republicans’ counterargument is that the legislation clearly has not prevented record numbers from casting ballots.

“The incredible turnout we have seen demonstrates once and for all that Georgia’s Election Integrity Act struck a good balance between the guardrails of access and security,” Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp agreed, saying Democrats’ talk of suppression is meant to get their base riled up to vote, the Times reported.

“They don’t want to know what the truth is,” he told supporters at a Saturday campaign event in Watkinsville. “They don’t care what the truth is. They want to talk about the narrative that drives their base and helps their political polling.”

The Post, which was very critical of Georgia’s new voting law when it passed last year, seemed to concede that it does not appear to be suppressing turnout.

The paper quoted a 70-year-old black woman named Patsy Reid, who said, “I had heard that they were going to try to deter us in any way possible because of the fact that we didn’t go Republican on the last election when [Donald] Trump didn’t win.

“To go in there and vote as easily as I did and to be treated with the respect that I knew I deserved as an American citizen — I was really thrown back.”

A version of this article originally appeared on Patriot Project.

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