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Georgia officials won’t take over elections in state’s largest, Democrat-heavy county

Georgia officials won’t take over elections in state’s largest, Democrat-heavy county

ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia’s State Election Board won’t take over running elections in the state’s most populous county, ending an investigation that had sparked fears of partisan meddling.

The board voted unanimously on Tuesday to end its performance review of Fulton County nearly two years after it had begun.

Multiple board members said that they want the county to continue to work on improvements before the 2024 election and not to backslide on work already done.

“The question is, are we going to draw a line in the sand and say let us go, be done with this, and leave us alone, which is a little bit of what I’m hearing… or are we going to say it’s time to change?” said State Election Board Chair Bill Duffey.

Fulton County officials noted that the review panel found no violations of state law or rules across nine elections that it monitored.

“I’m proud of the work of Fulton County and what we’ve achieved in the last few years and feel fully confident moving into the future that we’ll be setting the standard for how elections need to be run here and across the country,” said Cathy Woolard, the outgoing chair of the Fulton County election board.

  • June 20, 2023