The Justice Department sued the state of Georgia on Friday over a restrictive voting law passed in response to former President Donald Trump’s lies about mass voter fraud in the 2020 election.
The lawsuit alleges that the Georgia law was enacted with the purpose of denying or abridging the rights of Black voters in the state. The Justice Department says Georgia’s law was passed through a rushed process that departed from normal procedure, and contained provisions ― including limits on drop boxes for absentee ballots and on providing food and water to voters waiting in long lines ― that were passed with unlawful discriminatory intent.
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The Georgia legislature enacted the law “with knowledge of the disproportionate effect that these provisions … would have on Black voters’ ability to participate in the political process on an equal basis with white voters,” the suit says. The complaint noted that an “overall rise in Black political success” in recent years in Georgia “occurred against the backdrop of virulent racial appeals” including racist robocalls aimed at Stacey Abrams. The lawsuit also points to anti-Semitic attacks on now-Sen. Jon Ossoff and racist attacks on now-Sen. Raphael Warnock.
“One phone caller threatened to behead Reverend Warnock and referred to the church at which he is a pastor, Ebenezer Baptist ― the church once pastored by Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. ― using a vile racial epithet. The church had to filter comments on its social media pages given the significant number of racist comments relating to Rev. Warnock’s candidacy,” the Justice Department lawsuit states.
Though the lawsuit doesn’t name him, the Justice Department also points to an event in which former Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.) “mispronounced and mocked the pronunciation of then-Senator Kamala Harris’ first name during a campaign event, despite having been her Senate colleague for four years.”







