US judge blocks Georgia rule to count votes by hand
The ruling came a day after the same judge ruled that county election officials must certify election results by the deadline set in law.
A US judge has blocked a new rule that requires election day ballots in the state of Georgia to be counted by hand after the close of voting.
The ruling came a day after the same judge ruled that county election officials must certify election results by the deadline set in law.
The rulings are victories for Democrats, liberal voting rights groups and some legal experts who have raised concerns that Donald Trump’s allies could refuse to certify the results if the former president loses to Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris in next month’s presidential election.
The State Election Board last month passed the rule requiring that three poll workers each count the paper ballots — not votes — by hand after the polls close.
The county election board in Cobb County, in Atlanta’s suburbs, had filed a case seeking to have a judge declare that rule and five others recently passed by the state board invalid, saying they exceed the state board’s authority, were not adopted in compliance with the law and are unreasonable.
In a ruling late on Tuesday, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney wrote that the hand count rule “is too much, too late” and blocked its enforcement while he considers the merits of the case.
Judge McBurney on Monday had ruled in a separate case that “no election superintendent (or member of a board of elections and registration) may refuse to certify or abstain from certifying election results under any circumstance”.
While they are entitled to inspect the conduct of an election and to review related documents, he wrote, “any delay in receiving such information is not a basis for refusing to certify the election results or abstaining from doing so”.
Georgia law says county election superintendents — generally multimember boards — “shall” certify election results by 5pm on the Monday after an election, or the Tuesday if Monday is a holiday as it is this year.
The two rulings came as early in-person voting began on Tuesday in Georgia.
The judge also wrote that no allowances have been made in county election budgets to provide for additional personnel or expenses associated with the rule.
“The administrative chaos that will — not may — ensue is entirely inconsistent with the obligations of our boards of elections (and the SEB) to ensure that our elections are fair legal, and orderly,” he wrote.
The state board may be right that the rule is smart policy, Judge McBurney wrote, but the timing of its passage makes implementing it now “quite wrong”.
He invoked the memory of the riot at the US Capitol by people seeking to stop the certification of Democrat Joe Biden’s presidential victory on January 6, 2021, writing: “Anything that adds uncertainty and disorder to the electoral process disserves the public.”
During a hearing earlier on Tuesday, Robert Thomas, a lawyer for the State Election Board, argued that the process is not complicated and that estimates show that it would take extra minutes, not hours, to complete.
He also said memory cards from the scanners, which are used to tally the votes, could be sent to the tabulation centre while the hand count is happening so reporting of results would not be delayed.
State and national Democratic groups that had joined the suit on the side of the Cobb election board, along with the Harris campaign, celebrated Judge McBurney’s ruling in a joint statement: “From the beginning, this rule was an effort to delay election results to sow doubt in the outcome, and our democracy is stronger thanks to this decision to block it.”
A flurry of election rules passed by the State Election Board since August has generated a crush of legal cases.
Judge McBurney earlier this month heard a challenge to two rules having to do with certification brought by the state and national Democratic parties.
Another Fulton County judge is set to hear arguments in two challenges to rules tomorrow — one brought by the Democratic groups and another filed by a group headed by a former Republican legislator.
And separate challenges are also pending in at least two other counties.