I’m genuinely curious about this. Can you expound on what’s outrageous about the bill? I’m a novice in politics but have read more articles about the GA law than probably any other issue out there right now and I can’t find anything absurd about it.
I understand having disagreements on certain...
https://www.google.com/amp/s/thehill.com/homenews/campaign/457934-stacey-abrams-responds-to-rnc-chairwoman-concession-means-to-say-that-the%3famp
Abrams, speaking on "CBS This Morning," answered why she hasn't conceded.
"Concession means to say that the process was fair, but when I run an...
Abrams lost by 50k votes and has never conceded to this day. But the point I’m making is we have multiple elections with both sides claiming some type of fraud. We can all agree Trump’s claims are more severe in nature but regardless of how severe the claims are they all erode voter confidence...
Actually the Democratic party was considered the “racist” party until the 1960’s. Things switched around that time and Republicans became “racists”. I don’t know much about history but the Democrats were definitely responsible for some bad stuff during/after reconstruction.
I appreciate the response and the dialogue but I’m not completely sure what you’re trying to say. I don’t like Donald Trump either but none of what you said answered my question. I don’t see anything in the law that gives the board that much power to overthrow election results. And there’s going...
I’m genuinely curious where the voter suppression is in this law. I can get on board with making arguments for or against improving some of these new provisions but when you compare them to the prior voting laws in GA it seems there’s more opportunities to vote in person and a little less time...
I can’t understand why people keep acting like last year was the norm when it comes to voting. Extreme measures were taken and now that the pandemic is over some of those measures are now being reduced.
What in the bill makes it’s harder to vote? And what are you comparing it to that makes it harder. Using a once in a lifetime pandemic year as the baseline seems strange to me. Compared to the 2016 election it appears it’s much easier to vote going forward with drop boxes and extended early...
Exactly. To me that seems like common sense. You don’t want someone in a Trump/Biden shirt handing out freebies to people that could influence their vote. I’d assume other states have this same exact law. Seems like a very reasonable law to have in pace.
The news has been misleading on the polls being open. Election Day hasn’t changed, it’s 7-7. Early voting hours were defined previously as “working hours” which led to different interpretations depending on the county. So they defined working hours as 9-5 but will allow polls to be open 7-7 if...