Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Unlike Texas, new voter ID rules in Georgia didn’t cause surge in rejections

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Unlike Texas, new voter ID rules in Georgia didn’t cause surge in rejections

Voters should prepare in advance if they want to cast an absentee ballot this year, said Aunna Dennis, executive director for Common Cause Georgia, a government accountability organization. “Start the process early to be as prepared as possible so you don’t have to face hurdles that may come,” Dennis said. “We don’t know just yet what the impact is going to be until we actually have the primary.”

Since Texas introduced ID requirements for voting by mail, ballot rejections have spiked before next week’s primary election.

But preliminary data indicates a similar voter ID law in Georgia might not result in a dramatic increase in absentee ballot rejections here before the May 24 primary.

The rate of ballot rejections because of ID discrepancies in Georgia remained relatively low during November’s municipal elections, according to election records.

Local elections last year were the first major test of new requirements for absentee voters to provide a driver’s license number or other forms of ID before a higher-turnout primary this year.

In Texas, some counties initially reported rejecting as many as 40% of absentee ballots before the state’s primary on Tuesday, either because voters filled in the wrong ID number or overlooked the fields for adding their ID information. Texas election officials said the rejection rate has since fallen below 5%, which is still considered a high level. …

Georgia election officials updated voter records in 2021 to include more ID numbers from the Department of Driver Services, leaving 2% of registered voters without an ID number on file.

Still, Georgia did see an uptick in rejection rates because of ID issues, increasing from about 0.2% of ballots in the 2020 general election to 0.6% in 2021 municipal elections.

Overall rejection rates in Georgia rose not because of ID problems, but because ballots were delivered too late.

Georgia’s voting law limited the availability of drop boxes, contributing to the increase in ballots rejected for lateness because the U.S. Postal Service delivered them after election day. Rejections for late ballots jumped from 0.3% in 2020 to 1.5% in 2021.

Voters should prepare in advance if they want to cast an absentee ballot this year, said Aunna Dennis, executive director for Common Cause Georgia, a government accountability organization.

Election offices will begin accepting absentee ballot requests March 7, and the deadline to apply for an absentee ballot is 11 days before the May 24 election day.

“Start the process early to be as prepared as possible so you don’t have to face hurdles that may come,” Dennis said. “We don’t know just yet what the impact is going to be until we actually have the primary.”