Deepening concerns over widespread voter suppression in Georgia ahead of a closely-watched gubernatorial race, dozens of black senior citizens were forced off a bus that was taking them to vote in the midterm election this week after government officials raised concerns about the trip.
As Think Progress reported, the non-profit group Black Voters Matter had hosted a get-out-the-vote event at a senior center in Louisville, Georgia on Monday, and was preparing to take about 40 senior citizens to the polls on the state’s first day of early voting, when the center’s director told the riders to exit the bus on the orders of the Jefferson County clerk.
LaTosha Brown, a co-founder of Black Voters Matter, called the order a clear “intimidation tactic.”
“This is voter suppression, Southern style,” Brown told Think Progress. “I’m very upset. I’m angry.”
According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the county clerk had been alerted to the bus trip, which allegedly violated a law banning “political activity” at county-run facilities like the senior center. But according to Brown, there are no laws in majority-black Jefferson County prohibiting third-party groups from transporting voters to polling places.
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