Current:Home > ContactGeorgia election board rolls back some actions after a lawsuit claimed its meeting was illegal -Core Financial Strategies
Georgia election board rolls back some actions after a lawsuit claimed its meeting was illegal
View
Date:2025-04-23 19:55:53
ATLANTA (AP) — The Georgia State Election Board, which has become embroiled in conflict over how the state administers elections, voted Tuesday to redo some of its actions amid a lawsuit accusing it of meeting illegally.
The board voted 5-0 on Tuesday to debate again on Aug. 6 a pair of proposed rules sought by Republicans that three members advanced on July 12, including allowing more poll watchers to view ballot counting and requiring counties to provide the number of ballots received each day during early voting.
American Oversight, a liberal-leaning watchdog group, sued the board over the July 12 meeting where only board members Dr. Janice Johnston, Rick Jeffares and Janelle King were present. Democratic member Sara Tindall Ghazal was missing, as was nonpartisan board chair John Fervier,
The suit alleged the board broke Georgia law on posting notice for a public meeting. It also alleged that at least three board members were required to physically be in the room, invalidating the meeting because Johnston joined remotely.
King had argued it was merely a continuation of the July 9 meeting and was properly noticed.
The board also voted to confirm new rules that it advanced on July 9 when all five members were present. Those measures have already been posted for public comment. They could be finalized by the board on Aug. 19, after a 30-day comment period.
One of those proposed rules would let county election board members review a broad array of materials before certifying election totals. Critics worry board members could refuse to certify until they study all of the documents, which could delay finalization of statewide results, especially after some county election board members have refused to certify recent elections.
Other rules would require workers in each polling place to hand-count the number of ballots to make sure the total matches the number of ballots recorded by scanning machines, and require counties to explain discrepancies in vote counts.
During the July 12 meeting, Democrats and liberal voting activists decried the session as illegal.
“There was a weirdly overdramatic and excessive alarm raised — a seemingly coordinated misinformation campaign — followed by apparent media attacks and outrageous and ridiculous threats made to the State Election Board,” Johnston said in a statement Tuesday. She was appointed by the state Republican Party to the board and has led efforts to adopt rules favored by conservatives.
American Oversight’s interim executive director, Chioma Chukwu, called the decision a victory, saying the lawsuit had helped reverse the July 12 actions.
“However, we remain deeply concerned by the board’s decision to promptly revisit these problematic measures — including those coordinated with the state and national GOP — that serve to intimidate election workers and grant partisan advantage to preferred candidates this November,” she said in a statement.
Chukwu was referring to state Republican Party Chairman Josh McKoon’s claim that the party helped orchestrate the appointments of a majority of members and to emails that McKoon sent to Jeffares before July 9 with proposed rules and talking points.
veryGood! (2987)
Related
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- An Oil Industry Hub in Washington State Bans New Fossil Fuel Development
- Gigi Hadid arrested in Cayman Islands for possession of marijuana
- A Furious Industry Backlash Greets Moves by California Cities to Ban Natural Gas in New Construction
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Startups 'on pins and needles' until their funds clear from Silicon Valley Bank
- Judge agrees to loosen Rep. George Santos' travel restrictions around Washington, D.C.
- A Clean Energy Milestone: Renewables Pulled Ahead of Coal in 2020
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- This week on Sunday Morning (July 23)
Ranking
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- The truth is there's little the government can do about lies on cable
- 16 Michigan residents face felony charges for fake electors scheme after 2020 election
- Will the FDIC's move to cover uninsured deposits set a risky precedent?
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Why car prices are still so high — and why they are unlikely to fall anytime soon
- These Top-Rated $25 Leggings Survived Workouts, the Washing Machine, and My Weight Fluctuations
- First Republic becomes the latest bank to be rescued, this time by its rivals
Recommendation
Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
By 2050, 200 Million Climate Refugees May Have Fled Their Homes. But International Laws Offer Them Little Protection
Deer take refuge near wind turbines as fire scorches Washington state land
To Stop Line 3 Across Minnesota, an Indigenous Tribe Is Asserting the Legal Rights of Wild Rice
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
The FDIC was created exactly for this kind of crisis. Here's the history
Step up Your Skincare and Get $141 Worth of Peter Thomas Roth Face Masks for Just $48
Texas is using disaster declarations to install buoys and razor wire on the US-Mexico border