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Federal court might revive Georgia lawsuit claiming mass challenges violate Voting Rights Act
Federal court might revive Georgia lawsuit claiming mass challenges violate Voting Rights Act

Yahoo

time14-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Federal court might revive Georgia lawsuit claiming mass challenges violate Voting Rights Act

Mass voter challenges have been a mainstay in Georgia since the 2020 presidential election, when Democrat Joe Biden narrowly defeated Republican Donald Trump by about 12,000 votes in the state. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder A three-judge federal court panel spent an hour in a downtown Atlanta courthouse Tuesday hearing arguments from attorneys about whether a conservative Texas organization's mass voting challenges during a 2021 runoff violated the federal Voting Rights Act by intimidating minority voters. Plaintiff Fair Fight Action, founded by Stacey Abrams, argued in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit that U.S. District Court Judge Steve C. Jones erred in ruling last year that True the Vote's challenge to 365,000 Georgia voters' eligibility did not constitute intimidation prior to historic Democratic Senate victories in Georgia when Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff prevailed in the Jan. 5, 2021 runoff. At least one of the judges expressed skepticism about the soundness of the lower court ruling. Mass voter challenges have been a mainstay in Georgia since the 2020 presidential election, when Democrat Joe Biden narrowly defeated Republican Donald Trump by about 12,000 votes in the state. According to Fair Fight Action and others who filed suit, True the Vote's actions likely violated the Voting Rights Act by using inaccurate voter registration information and voter intimidation tactics such as posting citizen watchdogs to monitor people casting ballots. On Tuesday, the federal panel peppered the attorneys with questions while acknowledging the case's national significance on voting rights protections. Attorney Jake Evans, representing True the Vote, asserted that the intent behind the mass challenges was to protect election integrity. Evans said that the mass challenging of voters' eligibility prior to the 2021 runoff did not amount to voter intimidation. Fair Fight's attorney, Uzoma Nkwonta of the Elias Law Group, argued that although Jones acknowledged recklessness in his ruling, the district court erred in not following the generally accepted standard for taking a substantial step towards the course of action that led to the injury. Nkwonta referenced the Muscogee County election board having to take up more than 4,000 challenged ballots from the 2020 November general election based on faulty national change of address data. 'Not only was it foreseeable, it's exactly what True the Vote wished for and exactly what True the Vote demanded,' Nkwonta said. 'True the Vote issued press releases, prepared one-pagers, considered suing counties and did everything in their power to force (Muscogee) County to take the very action that they took.' 'The voter intimidation statutes have been enforced since the 1960s and even earlier, and they often involve cases in which individuals were applying laws or taking actions that were permissible in every other scenario, but were impermissible because they were intimidating voters,' Nkwonta said. Evans said that over the course of a seven-day trial the voters who testified did not provide proof of how they were intimidated by True the Vote. He argued the plaintiffs have failed to prove a violation of the Voting Rights Act. 'An attempted act has to be traceable to the alleged intimidation,' Evans said. 'Here, there are three individual voters where there is no connection. There is no alleged challenger that's submitted to challenge these individuals. It's completely untraceable.' Judge Federico Moreno said he disagreed with Evans stating it was an 'open and shut appeal.' 'I don't know about the substantive 11 B claims, but I think the district court committed legal error with regard to the attempt,' Moreno said, referencing a section of the act that bars voter intimidation. 'Attempt is generally defined, both in civil and criminal law, as the intent to carry out an objective and taking a substantial means toward doing that.' Moreno provided an anecdote about how a bank robber told a teller, 'Give me the money in your drawer' before then being thwarted by a security officer. 'That person has attempted to commit bank robbery, even though he has not stolen the money because he was stopped by a third-party intermediary,' Moreno said. In addition, Moreno questioned Evans about whether an organization that filed several hundred frivolous voter challenges could be considered an attempt to intimidate voters. Evans said that True the Vote did not use tactics to intimidate voters like other cases where robocalls were used to threaten voters or Native Americans were targeted by sending people to follow them into polling places. 'Judge Jones looked at the evidence,' Evans said. 'He evaluated the demeanor of the witnesses. He saw the witnesses testify, evaluated the totality of the evidence, and he made a factual finding in his order that said that there was no intent by True the Vote to intimidate any voter, any witness.' SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Court fight over 2021 Georgia mass voter eligibility challenges heads to federal court
Court fight over 2021 Georgia mass voter eligibility challenges heads to federal court

Yahoo

time12-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Court fight over 2021 Georgia mass voter eligibility challenges heads to federal court

On May 13, 2025, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta will hear a case concerning whether mass voter challenges were used to intimidate minority voters in the 2021 runoff. John McCosh/Georgia Recorder (file) A federal appellate court is set to hear a case Tuesday centered on a five-year debate over whether the national right-leaning group True the Vote used mass voter challenges to intimidate minority voters. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit will hear arguments in a case in which plaintiffs, including a voting rights group founded by Stacey Abrams, contend that the case has national implications. Attorneys from both sides will have 15 minutes to present their cases during Tuesday's hearing. Mass voter challenges have been a mainstay in Georgia since the 2020 presidential election, when Democrat Joe Biden narrowly defeated Republican Donald Trump by about 12,000 votes in the state. According to the Abrams-founded Fair Fight Action and others who filed suit, True the Vote's actions likely violated the Voting Rights Act by using inaccurate voter registration information and voter intimidation tactics such as posting citizen watchdogs to monitor people casting ballots. This case stems from True the Vote's efforts to challenge the voter eligibility of about 385,000 Georgia voters prior to the January 5, 2021 runoff election, when Democrats would take control of the U.S. Senate following historic wins by Georgia Democratic Sens. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff. In January 2024, Gainesville U.S. District Court Judge Steve C. Jones concluded last year that Fair Fight did not prove True the Vote's actions constituted voter intimidation prior to the dual Senate runoffs. However, Jones criticized the conservative group's 'reckless' methods in compiling a list of voters. Opponents of mass challenges claim that groups targeting Democratic-leaning counties are misusing the election law to challenge large numbers of voters as ineligible. Many conservatives have argued that voter registration lists need to be purged of ineligible voters, while Democrats and progressive activists have alleged that mass voter challenges aim to intimidate and remove voters who should remain eligible. Fair Fight alleges that True the Vote's list in the 2021 runoff included a disproportionate number of Black, brown, and first-time voters who helped secure the 2020 presidential race for Biden. 'The 385,000 mass challenge in the lead up to the January 5, 2021 runoff was the largest mass challenge ever filed in this way in the country,' Fair Fight CEO Lauren Groh-Wargo said. There's been a debate over whether some new voting rules would improve voter confidence or if they are just attempts to appease Trump supporters who say he lost because of unfounded claims of widespread election fraud. Georgia was at the center of the push to overturn the election results after Trump lost to Biden, becoming the first Republican presidential candidate to lose in Georgia in three decades. Trump's narrow loss was reaffirmed through three counts, including one recount that was done by hand. Multiple recounts and audits after the 2020 election confirmed it was not tainted by widespread fraud. According to state law, county election boards must find sufficient probable cause to move forward with an investigation when a voter does not appear to reside at their registered address, lists a non-residential address on their registration, or has other reasons that could disqualify them. True the Vote founder Catherine Engelbrecht said her group will argue that their tactics promote fair elections when they return to Georgia court Tuesday. 'This isn't just about one hearing — it's about holding the line for election integrity and defending the voice of we the people,' she said in a statement. 'Our legal team is locked in, sharpening every detail of our strategy. Our fight is to expose truth, uphold principle, and bring transparency to a process.' Marc Elias, an attorney with Elias Law Firm and founder of left-leaning Democracy Docket, argues that the mass voter challenges in the True the Vote case are an egregious violation of Section 11(b) of the Voting Rights Act, which guarantees that voters will not face intimidation during the voting process. 'Now, courts have been chipping away against lots of the federal voting rights protections. I'm not going to sugarcoat that,' Elias said. 'That has been true at the U.S. Supreme Court. It's been true at the lower levels. But the fact is attempts to intimidate voters is still illegal, and 11 B is still goo valid law throughout the country.' SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Georgia Secretary of State's Office to purge 455,000 registrations from voter rolls
Georgia Secretary of State's Office to purge 455,000 registrations from voter rolls

Yahoo

time25-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Georgia Secretary of State's Office to purge 455,000 registrations from voter rolls

If you haven't voted in a while and still want to, you will need to check your mailboxes for a letter from the secretary of state's office. The Georgia Secretary of State's office announced it would remove 455,000 people from the voting rolls because they haven't voted in the past two federal elections. State elections director Blake Evans insists they're doing it according to state and federal laws, which require periodic maintenance of those rolls. 'We care about voter list integrity, and we are required by state and federal law to do these types of matters because these are outdated records and somebody moves and they don't always think about cancelling their registration, so their records are out of date,' Evans said. TRENDING STORIES: High-level officials at Atlanta-based CDC announce departure Woman wakes to naked man breaking in to her Atlanta apartment Grandmother says 11-year-old granddaughter was stabbed in the hand at DeKalb school But not everyone agrees with the method and with the huge number, said to be one of the highest numbers of total cancellations in state history. Fair Fight Action's Lauren Groh-Wargo condemned the purge, saying, 'removing nearly half a million voters from the rolls in one sweep is concerning. The right to vote shouldn't have an expiration date.' Atlanta Democratic state Sen. Jason Esteves acknowledges that some purges must be made from time to time, but he wants a closer look at this one. 'I'll be taking a close look at the reasons why these folks are being purged to make sure that they're valid and my colleagues will be doing the same thing,' Esteves said. Evans insists that voters in jeopardy of getting removed will first get a letter in the mail this summer warning them to contact their office or their county office. 'These people still have a chance to stay on the voter rolls. We'll send one more mailer to them. We'll give them 40 days to respond,' Evans said. Evans said if you are purged and want to vote, you can always simply re-register. But remember, check your voting status before election day.

Digital Green Book fights misinformation targeting Black communities
Digital Green Book fights misinformation targeting Black communities

Axios

time23-03-2025

  • Business
  • Axios

Digital Green Book fights misinformation targeting Black communities

As the erasure of Black history intensified — through book bans, assaults on diversity, and digital disinformation — Atlanta-based technologist and strategist Esosa Osa observed it unfold and decided to take action. Why it matters: Instead of just calling it out, Osa built The Digital Green Book — an AI-powered platform designed to help Black communities spot misinformation, protect their data, and access trusted, culturally informed content. The big picture: Osa was concerned that Black voices were being suppressed, diversity initiatives were under attack, "woke" was being weaponized, and book bans were raising barriers to historical knowledge. The Digital Green Book is a roadmap for digital empowerment. Flashback: The name is a deliberate nod to the Negro Motorist Green Book, the Jim Crow-era guide that helped Black Americans navigate safely through a hostile country. "We needed a name that instantly communicated to Black folks: this is for you; this has your best interests at heart," Osa, founder and CEO of Onyx Impact, told Axios. Zoom in: Launched this month, Onyx Impact's platform provides tools to combat misinformation and navigate a challenging digital landscape. Osa, a former political strategist and financial analyst, founded the organization after working at Fair Fight Action, BlackRock and Morgan Stanley. Friction point: Researchers and critics have documented how AI systems often reinforce the very stereotypes Black Americans have spent generations trying to dismantle. Last year, the Congressional Black Caucus warned that without intentional design, AI will deepen racial inequities in hiring, housing, education, and finance — a phenomenon experts call "algorithmic redlining." A 2023 study by linguist Sharese King found that AI consistently assigned Black language speakers to low-prestige jobs and imposed harsher sentences in hypothetical cases — further entrenching bias. Yes, and: Osa notes that social platforms don't just reflect public opinion — they shape it. Right now, they're: But the problem went deeper. "We are not built to see the same headline 20 times, then the responses, then the reactions to those responses," she says. She realized the problem wasn't just misinformation—the sheer volume of manipulated content created a false sense of consensus and urgency. "We've got to tell people—this isn't real life," Osa said. "Forty-two percent of your online content might be bad bots." Zoom out: The Digital Green Book is designed to cut through the noise and give Black communities control over their digital lives. What it offers Misinformation detection – Assists users in recognizing digital manipulation and disinformation in real time. Data control guidance – Offers clear steps to curate social media feeds and regain ownership of online spaces. Child safety tools – Empower parents with strategies to shield children from the dangers of social media while fostering digital literacy. AI-powered knowledge base – A groundbreaking tool trained on Black media and historical sources to provide unbiased answers to questions. State of play: Osa's team fed the model vetted Black media, historical context, and trusted sources like the NAACP and the Legal Defense Fund. "You don't want AI to 'figure out' what it means to be Black from the internet—you'll get a horrible product." The goal: lower the barriers to discernment, making it easier to identify misinformation. Unlike traditional AI tools that pull from the open web, this system prioritizes Black-led sources and historically accurate information to prevent distortion. What's next: Osa's vision includes The Digital Green Book and Onyx Impact's initiatives to boost access to Black-led news, enhance digital literacy, and protect users from manipulation. "We are fundamentally in an information war—and we're losing. We need to understand how to navigate mass propaganda and misinformation now more than ever."

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