Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Georgia's Election Deemed 'Hot, Flaming Mess' In A Troubling Preview Of What November Could Bring
Georgia鈥檚 statewide primary elections on Tuesday were overwhelmed by a full-scale meltdown of new voting systems put in place after widespread claims of voter suppression during the state鈥檚 2018 governor鈥檚 election. Scores of new state-ordered voting machines were reported to be missing or malfunctioning, and hourslong lines materialized at polling places across Georgia. Some people gave up and left before casting a ballot, and concerns spread that the problems would disenfranchise untold voters, particularly African-Americans. Predominantly black areas experienced some of the worst problems. (Fausset, Epstein and Rojas, 6/9)
The missteps in Georgia, which had delayed its primary from March, are likely to raise alarms about how well states will handle voting if the coronavirus is still raging when Republican President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden meet in the Nov. 3 presidential election. Many voters complained of hours-long waits and voting machines that were not operating. Raffensperger said the problems were most acute in metropolitan Atlanta鈥檚 Fulton and DeKalb counties, although the Georgia Democratic Party said it received reports of problems 鈥渋n every corner of the state.鈥 (Whitesides and Cornwell, 6/9)
It raised the specter of a worst-case November scenario: a decisive state, like Florida and its 鈥渉anging chads鈥 and 鈥渂utterfly ballots鈥 in 2000, remaining in dispute long after polls close. Meanwhile, Trump, Biden and their supporters could offer competing claims of victory or question the election鈥檚 legitimacy, inflaming an already boiling electorate. 鈥淚 feel like we鈥檙e struggling as a country right now to hear people who really need to be heard,鈥 said Atlanta resident Ross Wakefield, a 28-year-old white software engineer who waited nearly four hours to vote and watched others 鈥減eace out and bail鈥 on the line. 鈥淭his does not give me a lot of confidence that we鈥檙e doing that.鈥 (Barrow, 6/10)
Many new poll workers brought on to replace those who had bowed out because of fears of the virus were unfamiliar with new ballot-marking devices that were deployed statewide for the first time Tuesday, replacing a paperless electronic voting system that a federal judge had declared insecure. Even before the pandemic struck, election security experts had questioned whether officials had enough time to provide adequate training for their use in the primaries. (Gardner, Lee, Willis and Glionna, 6/9)
鈥淔or November, we need to do a much better job of planning for the tens of millions of Americans who are going to be voting in person,鈥 said David Becker, executive director and founder of the Center for Election Innovation and Research, who has been working with the Georgia secretary of state鈥檚 office. 鈥淲e need to offer options for voters.鈥 Georgia鈥檚 secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, said Tuesday that his office has opened an investigation into problems in the Atlanta metropolitan area鈥檚 Fulton and DeKalb counties to determine how to resolve these issues before November鈥檚 election. (Corse, 6/9)
It took LaTosha Brown three hours to vote at her polling site in Atlanta. Brown, co-founder of Black Voters Matter, said it took her nephew six hours to vote on Friday during early voting hours. 鈥淲e have got to stop making voting a traumatic damn experience for black voters. Everything has to be a traumatic experience,鈥 said Brown. 鈥淭he secretary of state needs to resign. ... They always blame it on local officials.鈥 (Montellaro and Barron-Lopez, 6/9)
Seeking a city willing to allow a large-scale event amid the coronavirus pandemic, Republicans have tentatively settled on Jacksonville, Fla., as the new destination for the premier festivities of the Republican National Convention in August, according to three Republican officials briefed on the plans. (Linskey and Dawsey, 6/9)
The political arm for the network of groups led by Charles Koch is putting six-figures behind a new digital campaign ad urging Congress to enshrine into law some of the changes to the health care system that have allowed for greater flexibility for medical professionals during the coronavirus pandemic. The new ad from Americans for Prosperity (AFP), which will run on Facebook for the rest of the month,聽features聽Dr. Camille Honesty, an internal medicine specialist from Kansas City who praised the looser restrictions on medical care that she says were a necessity during the pandemic. (Easley, 6/10)