ATLANTA — Yesterday, the Clayton County Commission unanimously voted to condemn Georgia Republicans’ voter suppression legislation Senate Bill 202 along with any bill that “would decrease or limit all eligible citizens from voting.”
As noted by the AJC, “Clayton’s move comes weeks after the city of Stockbridge passed a similar resolution and Fulton County Commissioners approved one earlier this month,” adding to a growing chorus of local governments opposing SB 202. The Clayton County Commission’s vote also calls particular attention to the bill’s disproportionate impact on voters of color, with two-thirds of Clayton residents identifying as Black, the third highest in Georgia.
In addition to SB 202’s burdensome new ID requirements, the Clayton County Commission also cited the law’s criminalization of handing out food and water to voters and unnecessary limits on ballot drop boxes as reasons for their clear condemnation of this anti-voter law.
Read more from the AJC on this latest condemnation of SB 202:
AJC: Clayton County Commission formally opposes new voting law
- The Clayton County Commission on Tuesday voted unanimously to oppose the state’s newly passed voting law that many say echoes Jim Crow-era restrictions at the polls.
- The board said it opposes laws that “would decrease or limit all eligible citizens from voting,” and argues SB 202 does that by reducing the use of drop boxes in elections and making it illegal to provide water to voters waiting to cast their ballots.
- The new law also gives the state power to take over county election boards if it deems it necessary.
- Critics argue that the law is an attempt to suppress the vote after Joe Biden won the state in last year’s presidential election and Democrats Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff were elected to the Senate.
- Clayton’s move comes weeks after the city of Stockbridge passed a similar resolution and Fulton County Commissioners approved one earlier this month.
- Clayton Commissioner DeMont Davis said the law is a blatant attempt to turn back the clock, especially after county voters were widely hailed as helping Biden pull ahead of former President Donald Trump in the days following the election.
- “It’s not whether you are Democrat or Republican, it’s about whether you want to have your voice controlled,” Davis said.