Election expert pinpoints ‘the most sinister’ part of Georgia’s voting law that’s flying under the radar

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Georgia’s new voter suppression bill, which was signed into law by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp on Thursday, has been slammed by its critics for the many ways in which it will make voting more difficult in the Peach State. But journalist Ari Berman, during a Thursday night appearance on MSNBC’s “The Rachel Maddow Show,” zeroed in on what he considers the most disturbing part of the law: the fact that it gives Republican state officials in Georgia the power to take control of local election operations.

Maddow asked Berman, “If this law had been in place in Georgia in November 2020, when Trump came in and leaned on Georgia Republicans…. and said, ‘I need to have won Georgia — can you make that happen?’…. would they have been able to use Georgia law? Would they have been able to do it — do what Trump demanded, if this law had been in place?”

Berman responded, “Yes, if this law had been in place, Donald Trump absolutely might have succeeded in overturning the election in Georgia because his biggest Republican critic in Georgia was the secretary of state, (Brad Raffensperger)…. If the Republican legislature in Georgia had wanted to overturn the will of the voters, they could have done that through control of the State Board of Elections and through leaning on county board of elections. And this is why they have made this such a big part of the bill.” Continue reading.