Georgia opened up early voting for the midterms this week, and Republican election officials in the state have been touting record-breaking turnout to support their claim that voting is and will remain seamless.
On Tuesday, Gabe Sterling, a high-ranking GOP official in the secretary of state’s office, tweeted that more than 130,000 people cast ballots on the first day of early voting, nearly matching the first-day count from 2020 and setting a midterms record by surpassing the first-day votes in 2018 by more than 60,000 people.
We have reviewed the turnout yesterday and we did set a midterm 1st day of early voting & we nearly hit the record for a Presidential:
— Gabriel Sterling (@GabrielSterling) October 18, 2022
1st Day of Early Voting by cycle
2022: 131,318
2020: 136,739
2018: 70,849
That's an 85% increase from the last midterm. Midterm record! #gapol pic.twitter.com/kHeHlMLoa9
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, who has claimed that Georgia’s voter suppression laws don’t actually suppress the vote, attempted to spike the football as well.
“We’re extremely pleased that so many Georgians are able to cast their votes, in record numbers and without any reports of substantial delays,” he said in a news release. “This is a testament to the hard work of Georgia’s election workers, the professionals who keep our elections convenient and secure.”
On one hand, that sounds great and perhaps it is.
On the other hand, Raffensperger, who’s running for re-election, has made similar claims about Georgia’s elections in the past to undermine legitimate allegations of voter suppression that have been highlighted by Stacey Abrams, the Democratic nominee for Georgia governor. To do this, he has conflated Abrams’ claims with former President Donald Trump’s effort to overturn Georgia’s results in the 2020 presidential election.
Follow our Georgia Senate runoff live blog at msnbc.com/GArunoff beginning Tuesday at 10 a.m. ET for the latest updates and expert analysis in real time.
Gov. Brian Kemp, who as secretary of state oversaw his own race for governor against Abrams in 2018 and whose office put thousands of Georgia voter registrations on hold before that race, has also claimed high turnout is an indicator that voter suppression is a nonissue.
Their goal seems obvious: to quell talk about voter suppression and legitimize an election process that seems rigged in conservatives’ favor.
To be clear, there are promising signs about Georgia’s voter turnout numbers, but not enough to tell us much about voter access with any certainty. And we definitely don’t know enough to support any wild claims that the state’s new election law has helped secure elections. In fact, we have every reason to believe it will negatively affect turnout.
But there are a couple of things we do know.








