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“Republicans don’t need election reform to win,” he said in the interview. “We need leadership. I think there’s millions of Republicans waking up around the country that are realizing that Donald Trump’s divisive tone and strategy is unwinnable in forward-looking elections.
“We need real leadership, we need new focus, a GOP 2.0 that includes moderates in the middle, to get us to the next election cycle.”
The Georgia Chamber of Commerce also opposed restrictive aspects of both House Bill 531 and Senate Bill 241. “We have expressed concern and opposition to provisions found in both HB 531 and SB 241 that restrict or diminish voter access,” the chamber said in a statement the news site Popular Information obtained. “As these two omnibus bills move through the legislative process, we will continue to work on ensuring both accessibility and security within our voting system.”
Georgia Democrats have been protesting the suppressive legislative changes for several months now, with widely recognizable figures like former Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams tirelessly fighting the measures. She told CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday that Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and Gov. Brian Kemp “went to great pains to assure America that Georgia elections were secure” following Trump’s unsubstantiated claims of widespread voter fraud. Still, Republican legislators have used allegations of voter fraud, no matter how disputed, to support their efforts to restrict voting rights.
“And so the only connection that we can find is that more people of color voted and it changed the outcome of elections in the direction Republicans do not like,” Abrams said. She called the attack on voting rights “racist” and “a redux of Jim Crow in a suit and tie.”
Democratic state Sen. David Lucas similarly described the effort on the floor of the Georgia Senate. In the presidential election of 1876 between Democratic candidate Samuel Tilden and former Republican President Rutherford Hayes, the Republican promised to pull federal troops out of the last remaining Confederate state where they were deployed simply to win the election, Lucas said. Hayes sacrificed safety and the voting rights of Black southerners for political gain. “And that’s when we had Jim Crow, and folks got lynched,” Lucas said. The comparison between the 1876 election and present-day Georgia politics is obvious. “Now I would be negligent in my duties representing the 26th senatorial district to go for this malarkey,” Lucas said.
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