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Atlanta voter registration ends today

Monday, October 5th, 2009

100509Voting 0349(2)Take note, ballot casters! Today’s the last day to register if you want to vote for Atlanta’s next mayor and councilmembers on Nov. 3.

We ran through a list of links and how-to’s last week, so you can jump back to that post for info. But here they are again if you want to save a click.

Check to see if you’re already registered to vote. If not, here’s how you can get registered. Look here to see how you can vote via absentee ballot. To view Early and Advance Voting dates and locations, check out our previous post. This FAQ can answer a lot of questions about the upcoming municipal elections. Your county elections office can answer more specific questions or help you out with specific problems. The Georgia Secretary of State’s office has a convenient one-stop resource to handle general registration and election concerns.

Many municipal races will end up in a runoff, which traditionally have low voter turnout. That means your vote could make or break your favored candidates’ hopes for actually winning office. Now go forth and get registered!

(File photo by Joeff Davis)

Voter registration for Atlanta elections ends in … one week

Monday, September 28th, 2009

The political process sure has a helluva way of sneaking up on ya, don’t it?

If you want to help decide Atlanta’s next mayor and city councilmembers, you have to get legit with the state before Oct. 5. That’s… seven days away.

Don’t know whether you’re registered to vote? This handy tool courtesy of the Georgia Secretary of State can tell you. If you’re not registered to vote, here’s the info about what you gotta do if you want to cast a ballot. If you have any specific questions, it’s best to contact your county elections office. (The Secretary of State has an easy-to-use one-stop resource that can provide you with most registration and election information. Here’s a list of frequently asked questions about the upcoming Atlanta elections.)

You’ll have the option of voting before Nov. 3. Registered voters can cast ballots Oct. 12-23 during Early Voting. Advance voting will be held Oct. 26-30. We really don’t understand the difference between the two, only that there are additional polling locations. We gleefully copied a chart from the city’s elections website that lists dates and locations and pasted it after the jump.

If you want to vote via absentee ballot, you can download an application from the Secretary of State’s website and a ballot will be mailed to you.

Remember to bring one of these valid forms of ID to the polls. And grab a doughnut or some coffee if they’re available. We’ll have more details as voting time approaches. But in the meantime, get registered.

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Electronic voting-machine case to be heard by Georgia Supreme Court

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

On Monday, the Georgia Supreme Court will hear oral arguments over whether touch-screen voting — those controversial courtesy of Diebold that were ushered in after the 2000 presidential election clusterfuck — should be used in the state.

Early voting in downtown Atlanta, October, 2008,

The case stems from a 2006 challenge brought by Garland Favorito, who says the machines don’t produce a recorded ballot — you know, with results — and are open to tampering. (You can read about the plaintiffs’ concerns at Voter GA.)

After the jump, the case summary from the state Supreme Court communications office:

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Supreme Court rules on Voting Rights Act

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

The U.S. Supreme Court today exempted a small Texas governing authority from the Voting Rights Act, a law that requires 16 states — including Georgia — to get the federal green light before changing the way elections are conducted. Gov. Sonny Perdue, pointing to the civil rights advances made both nationally and in the state, has argued the part of the law that restricts Georgia is no longer necessary. The court did not address that issue today.

From the New York Times:

The court, with only one justice in dissent, avoided the major constitutional questions raised in the case over the federal government’s most powerful tool to prevent discriminatory voting changes since the mid-1960s.

Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the court, said the larger issue of whether dramatic civil rights gains means the advance approval requirement is no longer necessary ”is a difficult constitutional question we do not answer today.”

The court’s avoidance of the larger issue explains the consensus among justices in the case rendered Monday, where they otherwise likely would have split along conservative-liberal lines.

Justice Clarence Thomas, alone among this colleagues, said he would have resolved the case and held that the provision, known as Section 5, is unconstitutional.

”The violence, intimidation and subterfuge that led Congress to pass Section 5 and this court to uphold it no longer remains,” Thomas said.

Georgia’s runoff election is today

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

Did I mention that already? In Decatur, where I voted an hour ago, there were no lines; poll workers said people had been filing in all morning long.

The obvious big contests are Georgia’s U.S. Senate seat, Georgia Public Service Commission District 4 and the state Court of Appeals. There are several county elections still undecided, as well.

To find out where you need to go to vote, visit Georgia Secretary of State Karen Handel’s poll locator. Don’t forget to bring photo ID. If you have any questions, contact your county’s election office. Polls close at 7 p.m.

After today — unless we have a recount — all this will be over. We’ll come out holding hands and happy.

Georgia runoff election details

Monday, December 1st, 2008

This has been a grueling election cycle. Not only have we been burdened with the impossible task of writing about abstract things like “hope,” “change” and “drilling for oil,” we’ve had to slog through an extra four weeks of attack ads and endorsements long after the rest of the country (except for Minnesota!) had declared their winners.

But the candidates ask you to please — please — return to the polls tomorrow, Dec. 2.

If you didn’t vote on Nov. 4 — or during early voting — you can still vote in the runoff. To find out where to cast your ballot, visit the Georgia Secretary of State Karen Handel’s poll locator. Polls open at 7 a.m. and close to 7 p.m. And be sure to bring one of the six following forms of identification:

  • Any valid state or federal government issued photo ID, including a FREE Voter ID Card issued by your county registrar’s office or the Georgia Department of Driver Services (DDS)
  • A Georgia Driver’s License, even if expired
  • Valid employee photo ID from any branch, department, agency, or entity of the U.S. Government, Georgia, or any county, municipality, board, authority or other entity of this state
  • Valid U.S. passport ID
  • Valid U.S. military photo ID
  • Valid tribal photo ID

Enjoy! Let us know if there are any shenanigans.

Georgia early voting statistics updated

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Georgia Secretary of State Karen Handel’s website shows more recent results.

as of 11/19/08

Number of ballots cast :33,555

Number of ballots voted in person: 33,523
Number of mail-in ballots returned: 32

Turn out Demographics:
Black Female 4,548
Black Male 3,565
White Female 11,343
White Male 13,093
Asia-PI Female 69
Asia-PI Male 51
Hisp-Lt Female 59
Hisp-Lt Male 57
Native AM Female 1
Native AM Male 1
Other 768
Total 33,555

Fulton County’s now fourth in turnout. Forsyth is off the list.

Details on early and absentee voting for Georgia runoff

Friday, November 7th, 2008

UPDATE: Bah, semantics! Received word that I garbled some of the terminology on the post. It’s been corrected.

Were you one of the 2 million Georgians who enjoyed his or her early voting experience? The long lines, the new friends, the chance you may have ended up as a “missed connection” on Craigs List?

Good news! Absentee and early voting will be available for the Dec. 2 runoff.

After Georgia Secretary of State Karen Handel certifies election results next week, state election maestros and county election officials will start coordinating the runoff.

Matt Carrothers, Handel’s spokesman, told me these details over the phone a few minutes ago:

Early voting is anticipated to begin Nov. 17. According to Handel’s office:

Counties can begin early voting. While it is a county-by-county decision, there should be consistency state-wide.

Advance voting will be held Monday through Wednesday (Nov. 24-26) during the week of Thanksgiving. County election offices are closed Thursday and Friday because of the holiday.

If you voted by mail-in or absentee ballot in the General Election, you’ll have to re-request a ballot. You can download an application at the Secretary of State’s website or pick one up at your county election office. (Or just click here.) To find your county election office, click here. Applications can either be dropped off, mailed, or faxed as well.

Nate Silver: Exit polls are not to be trusted

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Nate Silver at FiveThirtyEight pulls some factoids from Mark Blumenthal’s Exit Poll FAQ and tells you why exit polls — the go-to resource for pundits and journalists in post-election maelstroms where viewers and readers want a lot of information and fast — should not be trusted. Each reason is worth a read; you can do so here.

Early Voting

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

I waited in line this morning for an hour and a half to vote at the Little 5 Points community center. I wondered what was holding up the line until I saw this guy.

See more photos here

Election results may take all night to determine

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Jim Galloway of the AJC’s Political Insider — who did a great job as a panelist during last night’s Atlanta Press Club U.S. Senate debate/finger-pointing quibblefestposts a memo from State Elections Boardmember Randy Evans. Evans says it could be Wednesday morning before all votes are counted.

From the memo:

Based on the most recent data, it appears that there are in fact three real reasons regarding why Georgia may not know the winner of the 2008 general election until Wednesday.

If we have a two- to four-hour line, as expected in many precincts around Georgia, it could be 9 p.m. or later before voters are done. Counties that finish earlier can start to tabulate votes immediately and some returns will come in early. However, the outcome will likely have to wait until all votes are in, and then tabulated. This could be late on Tuesday or possibly on Wednesday morning.

He then reminds us of absentee and provisional ballots. Click here to read what Evans has to say about those pesky devils.

(Awesome Vivarin car photo from RacingRoadTrip)

Georgia Stand-Up asks volunteers to ‘adopt’ a polling place

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

If you’ve already voted but still want to get back out among the crowds, Georgia Stand-Up’s presenting you with the opportunity.

The local non-partisan “think and act” tank seeks volunteers to provide assistance, voter protection and refreshments at crowded precincts on what’s expected to be a historic Tuesday.

From the group:

The organization is issuing a region-wide call for non-profits, grassroots organizations, community-based groups, church groups, sororities, fraternities and individuals to adopt a polling precinct with high voter turnout and provide care to the voters at those locations in Clayton, DeKalb, Fulton, and Gwinnett counties. Voter Care, a new component of the organization’s STAND-UP & Vote program, provides voters standing in long lines with pertinent voter information, refreshments, relief from standing in line, and voter protection assistance.

For more information, give Georgia Stand-Up a call at  (404) 581-0061 or send an e-mail here. You can also visit its website here.

Voting problems hit Atlanta’s Adamsville Rec Center

Friday, October 31st, 2008

Georgia Democrats are calling for Georgia Secretary of State Karen Handel to extend advanced voting on Saturday and Sunday after computer glitches caused a reported 500 people to wait two hours in line at a Fulton County polling place.

State Rep.-elect Rashad Taylor, D-Atlanta, says poll workers at the Adamsville Recreation Center in Southwest Atlanta told him voter check-in machines couldn’t access the Secretary of State’s system shortly after 7 p.m. on Thursday night. When he arrived at the rec center to assist poll workers, Taylor — who was joined by Atlanta City Council President Lisa Borders, Councilmember C.T. Martin and City Council Clerk Rhonda Johnson — says he saw an estimated 500 people still waiting to cast ballots.

“A few days ago, there was a problem connecting to the system,” the representative-elect says. “This time, there was a problem with the system.”

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Li’l birdie whispers: Early votin’ candidate

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Which soft-spoken U.S. Senate candidate — who also served in the Georgia General Assembly — was spotted waiting in queue in Fulton County at 11:20 a.m. to cast his early ballot? We’re not naming any names, but trusted sources say this modern-day Atticus Finch doesn’t just want to kick the incumbent out of office — he also plans to honor his citizen’s duty so he can continue his hard-fought campaign.

Which leads us to wonder: What better time for the incumbent Republican — who we’ll just call Sugar Daddy — to launch a sneak attack against this challenger than when he’s standing two hours in the cold, like a noble soldier, slogging on the slow march toward freedom and a brighter life for all Americans? See him stand there, like a beacon of justice, like a — wait, what the hell am I writing? Jim Martin was seen standing in line to vote early with Joan, his wife, just now in Fulton County.

My inimitable colleague Scott Henry just returned from Fulton County’s early voting location and spotted Martin there. He says the line was two hours long.

Obama campaign to drive Atlanta, Macon college students to polls

Friday, October 24th, 2008

If you’re stuck at college in Atlanta or Macon without a car and those damn campus buses don’t go anywhere near the polls, the Barack Obama campaign is here to save you.

Workers from the presidential nominee’s Hope Depots© will offer free bus rides for students from select colleges and universities next week for advanced voting.

Full list with details follows after the jump:

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Today is last day to register to vote

Monday, October 6th, 2008

This is the last time I’ll hector you about it. But if you haven’t yet registered to vote, you have until the end of today to do so at a local registrar’s office or mail in your application.

And to brighten your Monday morning, view the latest early voting statistics after the jump. According to Georgia Secretary of State Karen Handel’s office, 263,408 people have taken advantage of absentee and in-person early voting ballots. African Americans, historically a key demographic for Democrats, have thus far cast 37 percent of those. DeKalb County leads the pack with 28,639 early voters. Fulton and Gwinnett Counties follow with 19,589 and 14,966 ballots cast, respectively.

Handel says she hopes 1 million of Georgia’s 5.5 million registered voters visit the polls before Nov. 4. Help her out and save yourself a headache — find your nearest early voting location here.

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Voter registration ends Monday

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

When you’re sitting at the breakfast table Sunday morning, reading Ranger Rick and writing out your weekly to-do list, be sure the first thing you jot on there is “register to vote.” Monday is the deadline. Don’t miss it.

Also, it needs to be noted: Just got off the phone with Matthew Carrothers of Georgia Secretary of State Karen Handel’s office. He wanted to clear up the confustion about Wednesday’s post about people who haven’t voted in the last three years getting dropped from voting rolls.

“The issue of not having any contact with your county board of elections or registrars’ office [affecting your voting status] is completely false. You’re not removed from the voting rolls at all. If you have any questions about your voting status, please check with your county registrars’ office or check online at the Secretary of State’s website.”

I’m going to hammer this home and say it again and again. Check to be sure you’re registered. If your status is listed as “inactive,” you need not worry. Carrothers says that’s a coding mechanism required by law and after voting in this election, your status will be updated. (He says Debra was correct in the comments.)

Georgia seeing ‘purged voters’

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

The AJC adds some details to Wednesday’s Fresh Loaf post about voters who’ve been purged from registration lists.

The state regularly removes the names of voters who have died, committed felonies or relocated. But critics say qualified voters like Coxwell, who temporarily moved to another Georgia county, sometimes get expelled in the process.

Just days remain before Monday’s deadline to register to vote and be eligible to vote in the presidential election — or re-register, if necessary. Watchdog groups worry some Georgians might arrive at their precincts only to find their votes will not count if they have been removed from the rolls.

State officials won’t say how many names have been purged from the voter rolls in the past year. Purging is a routine process mandated by law meant to ensure registrars’ records are up to date, thereby reducing the likelihood of ineligible voters casting ballots.

But Helen Butler, executive director of Coalition for the People’s Agenda, has voiced concerns about problems that purging creates. Last year, after 274,000 names were removed from the rolls, Butler criticized elections officials for not doing enough to notify affected voters.

Bad news: You might not be registered to vote

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

Monday, Oct. 6 is the last day to register to vote. And if you think you’re already registered but haven’t cast a ballot in the last three years, you may be turned away when you try to exercise your right.

There are murmurs that some folks who, after visiting Georgia Secretary of State Karen Handel’s website to see if they’re registered, are told they’re not, and this is one of the reasons listed as why:

You have not had written contact with your board of registrars office within the last 3 years (which includes voting, change of address, updated voter registration application), which would cause your name to be removed from the voter rolls.

Emphasis added. So if you haven’t voted in the last three years — or you’ve been a bad citizen and not written a letter to your dear old friend Karen Handel — you may not be eligible to cast a ballot.

Don’t let that happen to you when you go to vote. Double check your registration status here. It takes less than a minute. Literally. (I found out I’m still registered in Cobb County, so I’ve got to fix that mess.) Tell your friends to do the same. If your status is not listed as “ACTIVE,” contact or visit your local registration office or the secretary of state. You can download a registration application here.

Don’t let one of the most politically exciting times in your life be screwed up by bureaucratic bullshit. You’ve got until Monday, Oct. 6.

Morning headlines

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

VOTE: No one else is going to, so your vote will count that much more. Click here for CL’s voter guide.

DON’T DRINK THE WATER: A toxin found in Mars’ water dims scientists’ hopes of finding life there.

DOCK BLOCK: More than 2,300 private docks were built in coastal Georgia between 1996 and 2006, and each one can reduce biomass production by 30 percent below it due to blocked sunlight. Researchers are thus studying four types of docks that allow sunlight through.

NEW GRADY CEO: Says changing “the aura” will be the difference at Grady; plans to buy upgraded medical equipment, identify the top 10 financial issues and streamline processes in an effort to attract more insured patients to the beleaguered hospital.

WI-FI IN THE SKY: Delta plans to start offering Wi-Fi on all its domestic flights by next summer, but it’ll cost $10 for three hours or less and $13 for longer flights.

FIELD TRIPS: Georgia schools considering canceling them to save fuel.

TAILS WAGGING DAWGS: Mark Richt discusses the slew of arrested and penalized players this offseason; he and top players echo the line that they won’t be a distraction for long.

Georgia electronic voting probed

Monday, July 21st, 2008

A security consultant and former policy adviser to Sen. John McCain is investigating allegations of voting-machine tampering in Georgia’s 2002 elections, according to Raw Story.

Stephen Spoonamore says he was given a computer patch from a whistleblower who worked in former Secretary of State Cathy Cox’s office. The whistleblower alleges that prior to the November 2002 elections, the CEO of Diebold personally installed the patch on his company’s voting machines in DeKalb and Fulton counties.

Incumbent Democratic Sen. Max Cleland was beaten by Republican Saxby Chambliss in the 2002 race, and Democratic Gov. Roy Barnes was upset by Republican Sonny Perdue.

Voting/polling place complaints or problems?

Tuesday, February 5th, 2008

Here’s the information on how to register complaints, from the city of Atlanta.

To register voting/polling place complaints constituents may call 404-330-6500 or email municipalclerk@atlantaga.gov.

Please provide name, phone number, precinct and nature of problem.

Let us know as well, either in the comments or here.