Mainstream media’s print and online coverage of the Georgia Senate runoff between Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock and Republican nominee Herschel Walker repeatedly ignored GOP voter suppression efforts affecting the race, leaving out issues like a shorter runoff period and strict photo ID requirements.
Since no candidate received more than 50% of the vote in the November midterm election, Georgia law stipulates that the two candidates with the highest vote counts face off in today’s runoff race. While the race won’t necessarily decide control of the Senate, a win for Warnock would give Democrats greater flexibility, countering legislative opposition posed by more conservative members of the party and reprieving Democrats of relying on Vice President Kamala Harris to cast the tie-breaking 51st vote.
The highly watched Senate race has been met with commensurate voter turnout with unprecedented numbers of early ballots cast, breaking multiple state records. However, several state restrictions on voting have made it much more difficult for individuals, particularly Black voters, to cast their votes, making the unparalleled success of early voting in Georgia especially exceptional.
In 2021, Republican Gov. Brian Kemp signed a voter suppression law, described by voting rights advocate and former Democratic gubernatorial nominee Stacey Abrams as “Jim Crow 2.0,” which added new administrative barriers to obtaining an absentee ballot. Since 2005, Georgia law required in-person voters to provide photo ID, but the 2021 law added further ID requirements for mail-in voters to verify their identities — a burden that disproportionately affects Black voters.
As The Atlanta Journal-Constitution noted in June 2021, Black voters “are much less likely than white voters to have ID numbers matched to their voter registrations.” Social justice organizations including the Brennan Center for Justice, the Southern Poverty Law Center, and the NAACP Legal Defense Fund have decried the new law for disproportionately suppressing Black voters.
Additionally, the law restricted the number of ballot drop boxes, prohibited volunteers from giving voters food or water while waiting in line, and cut down the length of the runoff calendar by half, condensing the nine-week process to just four. The shortened runoff period originally contained no opportunities for Saturday early voting until Warnock and other Democratic groups successfully sued to open early voting centers on November 26.
Some mainstream print and online coverage of the Senate runoff election frequently excluded important context about Georgia voter suppression efforts, whether it was not mentioning the shorter runoff period or brushing past the voter ID law. This lack of context was especially prevalent in reporting focused on the high early voter turnout. Articles that did mention these voter suppression tactics were often brief or undermined that reporting by quoting GOP politicians disputing that there were suppressive efforts.