Democrats have been working to register large numbers of black voters in Georgia. So it’s no surprise that Republican officials are pulling out all the stops to make it as difficult as possible—including what looks a lot like a politically motivated fraud investigation.
Earlier this week, Secretary of State Brian Kemp, a Republican, sent a subpoena requesting documents to the New Georgia Project, a voter registration group founded by House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams, a Democrat.
In a memo to county officials, Kemp said he’s “received numerous complaints about voter applications submitted by the New Georgia Project.”
He added: “Preliminary investigation has revealed significant illegal activities’ (sic) including forged voter registration applications, forged signatures on releases, and applications with false or inaccurate information.”
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In an interview with msnbc, Abrams said she had been working closely and cooperatively with Kemp’s office for months.
“He keeps using the phrase fraud,” Abrams said. “Fraud connotes an attempt to deceive. We have been incredibly transparent.”
Abrams laid out a lengthy set of procedures that she said her organization goes through to ensure it’s complying with the law.
“We notify them that we’re doing it, we turn in the forms, we put our organization’s information on the form, we have them verify that they’ve received it, we verify that we turned it in, we keep track of every name that we submit in accordance with state law, and we turn in every form we get,” she said. “We also do background checks on all our employees and we take appropriate action if any employee is found to not be meeting our standards. And we run our own independent voluntary quality control.”
Abrams added that her group is bound by law to hand in all voter registration forms it collects—so if canvassers bring back forms with errors, it can’t throw them out.
“The challenge that I have is, I’m not sure what else we could do,” she said.
It’s not hard to see why Republicans might want to hamper the New Georgia Project’s activities. The state is hosting a tight Senate race this year, which could help determine control of the chamber, as well as a race for governor. Abrams says her group has already collected 85,000 new voter registration applications, with a goal of 120,000. If 200,000 likely Democrats are brought to the polls this year, they’d make deep-red Georgia competitive, according to party strategists.
Abrams, who is black, was asked whether she believed the purpose of the probe was to crimp her group’s work registering voters in African-American neighborhoods.









