Georgia Senate election had voter ‘suppression’ despite Warnock win: Jean-Pierre

WASHINGTON — White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre insisted Wednesday that “there was suppression” of voters in Tuesday’s Georgia Senate runoff election despite Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock’s easy win.

Jean-Pierre made the claim while defending President Biden’s past remarks equating the Peach State’s 2021 election reform law with racist segregation-era policies.

“The president … called it ‘Jim Crow in the 21st century‘ and a blatant attack on the Constitution. So does he still see it that way?” Fox News correspondent Jacqui Heinrich asked Jean-Pierre at her regular briefing.

“There was suppression,” Jean Pierre replied. “We saw that throughout the Georgia election. So that is something that was reported on. So I leave it to those reports. But even with that, the American people came out.”

Warnock, a pastor at Martin Luther King Jr.’s former Atlanta church, defeated Republican candidate Herschel Walker by nearly 3 percentage points, according to preliminary data, after leading the former Heisman Trophy winner by just 0.9% in the Nov. 8 general election.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said that voter suppression occurred in the Georgia runoff election.
Getty Images

The Senate contest was a rare instance of both major-party candidates being African-American in the former heartland of the Confederacy. Walker underperformed other Republicans — including Gov. Brian Kemp, who easily won re-election — after reports that he pushed two women to get abortions despite professing a public pro-life stance.

A White House spokesman defended Jean-Pierre’s briefing remark, pointing to Warnock’s Tuesday night victory speech, which described long lines and a legal struggle that ensured early voting was allowed on the Saturday after Thanksgiving — after state officials claimed the election law barred Saturday voting following a state-recognized holiday on the prior Thursday or Friday.

The spokesman also cited a pre-general election article in Time magazine that said voting “hasn’t been easy for everyone” and a Dec. 4 NBC report that said students at historically black colleges “face an extra obstacle in voting” because their private-school IDs don’t count as state-issued documents, unlike their public-school peers.

NBC also reported that early-voting turnout was lower than in the 2021 runoffs that, unlike Tuesday’s contest, decided control of the Senate.

Sen Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.)
Raphael Warnock won reelection to a full six-year term Tuesday.
Getty Images

Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock easily won re-election against Republican Hershel Walker.

The Georgia state election overhaul adopted last year was drafted by Republicans after former President Donald Trump claimed that widespread election fraud robbed him of a second term. But state Republicans who rejected Trump’s fraud claims, including Kemp, said the reforms were reasonable modifications and not intended to discourage voting.

Biden decried the 2021 state law as a more insidious version of Jim Crow, calling it “Jim Eagle.”

“The 21st century Jim Crow assault is real. It’s unrelenting. We’re gonna challenge it vigorously,” Biden said.

President Joe Biden addresses a crowd in Atlanta
President Biden claimed that a 2021 Georgia election law was worse that Jim Crow-era racial discrimination.
REUTERS

Critics said Biden misrepresented Republican state policies. For example, The Washington Post awarded the president “Four Pinocchios” in April 2021 for falsely describing the law’s impact on voting hours.

The Georgia law didn’t alter Election Day voting hours and expanded early voting by adding a second mandatory Saturday. It affirmed that counties can offer early voting on two Sundays and allowed counties to extend early voting beyond normal business hours.

Democrats opposed provisions that required a photo ID to get an absentee ballot, shortened the window of time to vote absentee and allowed state officials to take over local election offices in response to alleged misconduct.

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