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Georgia judge invalidates more controversial election rules

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Georgia judge blocks state’s controversial hand-count rule
Megan Varner/Reuters
ByOlivia Rubin
October 16, 2024, 11:56 PM

One day after a Georgia judge invalidated the state's controversial "hand count" rule, a separate judge Wednesday evening invalidated even more rules that were passed by the Republican-led state election board, declaring them "unlawful and void."

Fulton County Judge Thomas Cox ruled after an hours-long hearing to invalidate seven rules total, including the hand count rule, finding in part that the board did not have the authority to enact them.

Cox made clear that the State of Georgia and the State Election Board "are hereby DIRECTED TO IMMEDIATELY REMOVE THESE RULES FROM THEIR ROLES AND OFFICIAL REPORTING" and to "IMMEDIATELY INFORM ALL STATE AND LOCAL ELECTION OFFICIALS THAT THESE RULES ARE VOID AND ARE NOT TO BE FOLLOWED," in his decision.

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MORE: Georgia’s controversial hand count rule blocked by judge, 'too much, too late'

People prepare to vote at a polling station as Georgians turned out a day after the battleground state opened early voting, in Atlanta, Oct. 16, 2024.
Megan Varner/Reuters

The rules now invalidated include a rule calling county officials to certify election results after "reasonable inquiry."

Cox wrote in his order that rule "adds an additional and undefined step into the certification process" and that it is "inconsistent with and unsupported" by state law.

He also invalidated a rule that "requires that a person delivering an absentee ballot provide a signature and photo ID at the time the absentee ballot is delivered."

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MORE: Election Day restrictions in Georgia raise red flags

A voter enters a polling station as Georgians turned out a day after the battleground state opened early voting, in Atlanta, Oct. 16, 2024.
Megan Varner/Reuters

The judge said in his ruling that state provisions don't require that.

"The SEB thus has no authority to require such presentment as a condition of accepting and counting an otherwise properly delivered ballot," Cox wrote.

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