Long-Running Lawsuit Over Georgia Vote-Counting Equipment May Finally Get a Trial

In August 2017, some Georgia voters filed a lawsuit in state court, alleging that the Georgia vote-counting system is not reliable and the election results are not subject to being audited. Curling v Raffensperger, Superior Court, Fulton County, 2017cv-292233. A few weeks later it was removed to federal court, Curling v Raffensperger, n.d., 1:17cv-02989. It was assigned to U.S. District Court Judge Amy Totenberg, an Obama appointee.

On May 2, 2023, a five-hour hearing was held to determine if there will be a trial. See this story. One of the reasons the case has taken so long is that in 2019, the Georgia legislature passed HB 316, which provided that all the voting machines should be refigured to produce a ballot marking device, a piece of paper handed to every voter after the voter finishes voting. The paper tells the voter which candidates the voter voted for. Plaintiffs are not satisfied with this modification, because they argue the paper produced by the machine doesn’t necessarily prove that the machine actually recorded the results in conformity to what the paper shows. Instead they want a paper ballot marked by the voter and then read by an optical scanner. With that system, the paper ballots themselves could always be counted by hand, if there were any doubt that the optical scanner had done a good job.

This case is possibly the most complex election law case ever filed, with tens of thousands of pages of documents already filed.

April 2023 Ballot Access News Print Edition

Ballot Access News
April 2023 – Volume 38, Number 11

This issue was printed on green paper.


Table of Contents

  1. NEW MEXICO LEGISLATURE PASSES BILL TO RESTRICT MINOR PARTY BALLOT ACCESS
  2. MINNESOTA BALLOT ACCESS THREATENED
  3. OTHER ACCESS BILLS
  4. WHY SORE LOSER LAWS CAN’T BE APPLIED TO PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES
  5. PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY CHANGES
  6. ILLINOIS BALLOT ACCESS CASE RULED MOOT
  7. NO LABELS PETITIONING
  8. OTHER PARTY BALLOT QUALIFICATION NEWS
  9. RANKED CHOICE VOTING PASSES IN TWO CITIES
  10. BOB RICHARDS DIES
  11. LIBERTARIAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE FILES TRADEMARK LAWSUIT
  12. COFOE CONTRIBUTES TO CERT PETITION COSTS IN NEW YORK
  13. PROHIBITION PARTY SETS NATIONAL CONVENTION
  14. SUBSCRIBING TO BAN WITH PAYPAL

Iowa House Passes Bill Regulating Presidential Caucuses

On May 1, the Iowa House passed HF 716, which regulates presidential caucuses. It says only attendees can vote. This bill is intended to stop the Democratic Party’s plans for its 2024 caucuses, which would allow postal ballots. The bill is very likely unconstitutional under the U.S. Supreme Court decisions of the 1970’s and 1980’s that recognize political party autonomy. Thanks to Political Wire for the news about the bill’s progress.