Georgia election board walks back rules approved at meeting flagged by state AG

Board member Rick Jeffares, right, threatens to remove people for being disruptive.
Protesters lodged accusations of open meetings violations at three conservative State Election Board members on July 12. Board member Rick Jeffares, right, responds by threatening to remove people for being disruptive. (Stanley Dunlap/Georgia Recorder)


The nonprofit government watchdog group that sued to overturn votes taken at a Georgia State Election Board meeting earlier this month — held despite warnings from the Georgia Attorney General — says it will continue to monitor the board’s actions after the panel rescinded its earlier vote during a virtual meeting Tuesday afternoon.

Tuesday’s meeting was set in the wake of a lawsuit filed by American Oversight on July 19 against conservative appointed election board members Rick Jeffares, Janice Johnston, and Janelle King alleging they failed to provide timely public notice for the July 12 meeting that did not have enough board members present. Those three board members say they are unsure or don’t accept that President Joe Biden was the winner of Georgia’s 2020 presidential election.

During its regularly scheduled meeting on July 9, the board advanced several rules, moving forward changes that require public notification for 30 days before final adoption at a subsequent meeting. The three conservative members rushed to call a meeting later that week to push through more changes in a way that the state’s top enforcer of Georgia’s Open Meetings Act warned in advance could violate the law.