Current:Home > MarketsBig Georgia county to start charging some costs to people who challenge the eligibility of voters -Secure Growth Academy
Big Georgia county to start charging some costs to people who challenge the eligibility of voters
View
Date:2025-04-18 10:03:39
ATLANTA (AP) — An election board in one of Georgia’s largest counties has voted to start charging people who challenge the eligibility of voters for the cost of notifying the challenged voters.
The Cobb County Board of Elections and Registrations voted 4-1 on Tuesday to adopt the rule. Debbie Fisher, a Republican member of the board, was the only vote against the rule.
Republican activists are challenging thousands of voters in Georgia as part a wide-ranging national effort coordinated by Donald Trump’s allies to take names off voting rolls. Most of the people they are targeting have moved away from their old address, and the activists argue that letting those names stay on the rolls invites fraud. But Democrats and liberal voting rights activists argue Republicans are challenging voters either to remove Democrats or to sow doubt about the accuracy of elections in advance of 2024 presidential voting.
Democrats have been pushing to start charging for each challenge filed, in part as an effort to deter people from targeting hundred or thousands of voters using software programs such as EagleAI or IV3 that facilitate mass challenges. A 2021 Georgia law specifically says one person can challenge an unlimited number of voters in their own county.
In suburban Atlanta’s Cobb County, a onetime Republican bastion that now produces Democratic majorities, the board voted only to charge for the cost of printing the challenge notice and for postage to mail it, likely to be less than a dollar per challenge. But that could add up. Cobb County Elections Director Tate Fall has estimated that it cost about $1,600 to mail out notices from one batch of 2,472 challenges filed last month.
Democrats have also wanted counties to charge challengers for staff time to research and process challenges. But Daniel White, a lawyer for the board, said Tuesday that he concluded that the board couldn’t do that unless state law is changed to grant specific authorization. However, he said he concluded the board has the inherent power to charge for sending notices, in the same way a court has the inherent power to charge someone for serving notice of a lawsuit on the defendants.
“If you’re talking about 3,000 voters being challenged and notice having to go out to 3,000 voters being challenged, that really increases your costs,” White said.
But Republicans opposed the measure. Fisher called it “egregious” and “just wrong” to charge people for exercising their challenge rights.
Cobb County Republican Party Chairwoman Salleigh Grubbs said the board is failing to do its job of ensuring clean voter rolls, while challengers are stepping in to help.
“When the Board of Elections is trying to charge people for doing the job they should be doing, that’s a disgrace,” Grubbs said.
The board also adopted other rules around challenges, saying it won’t accept challenges against people who have already been moved to the inactive voter list. For people who have moved, federal law says Georgia can only cancel an inactive registration if a voter doesn’t respond to a mailing and then doesn’t vote in two following federal general elections. That process takes years. Challengers have been targeting inactive voters for quicker removal.
Counties are making rules in part because the state hasn’t issued guidelines to counties on handling challenges. That’s leading to differences in how counties handle the same types of challenges.
An Associated Press survey of Georgia’s 40 largest counties found more than 18,000 voters were challenged in 2023 and 2024, although counties rejected most challenges. Hundreds of thousands more were challenged in 2020, 2021 and 2022.
A new law that took effect July 1 could lead to a surge in challenges by making it easier for challengers to meet the legal burden to remove someone. Some groups have sued to block the Georgia measure, arguing it violates federal law.
veryGood! (832)
Related
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- 85-year-old Idaho woman who killed intruder committed 'heroic act of self-preservation'
- Costco is selling lots of gold; should you be buying? How this gold rush impacts the market
- Kentucky hires Mark Pope of BYU to fill men's basketball coaching vacancy
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Golden Bachelor's Gerry Turner Officially Files for Divorce From Theresa Nist
- Coachella is here: What to bring and how to prepare to make the most of music festivals
- Bakery outlets close across New England and New York
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Who won the $1.3 billion Powerball jackpot in Oregon? We might know soon. Here's why.
Ranking
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Wisconsin woman in Slender Man stabbing will remain in psychiatric hospital after release petition denied
- See the cast of 'Ghosts' experience their characters' history at the Library of Congress
- Krystal Anderson's Husband Shares Lingering Questions Over Former Kansas City Chiefs Cheerleader's Death
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- World reacts to O.J. Simpson's death, from lawyers and victim's relatives to sports stars and celebrities
- Celebrating O.J. Simpson's football feats remains a delicate balance for his former teams
- Yellow-legged hornets, murder hornet's relative, found in Georgia, officials want them destroyed
Recommendation
How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
Riley Strain Case: Family Friend Reveals Huge Development in Death Investigation
Hamas says Israeli airstrike kills 3 sons of the group's political leader Ismail Haniyeh in Gaza
World reacts to O.J. Simpson's death, from lawyers and victim's relatives to sports stars and celebrities
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Wisconsin teen sentenced in bonfire explosion that burned at least 17
Lifetime to air documentary on Nicole Brown Simpson, O.J. Simpson's ex-wife who was killed
Tiger Woods, others back on the course at the Masters to begin long day chasing Bryson DeChambeau