Georgia's State Election Board settles records lawsuit brought by watchdog group
Published in Political News
ATLANTA — The Georgia State Election Board voted to approve a settlement agreement Wednesday in a lawsuit brought by a left-leaning watchdog group that alleged the board obstructed access to public records.
In a lawsuit filed last year in Fulton County, American Oversight claimed the board had “systematically obstructed public records requests” for information about voter eligibility challenges, communications with outside organizations and voter citizenship verification.
All the board members had used private Gmail accounts to conduct official business but have since switched over to official government emails.
Two Republican members of the board, Janice Johnston and Janelle King, have said they follow open records laws and provide emails when requested. But they’ve said they’re unwilling to share their email accounts with records staff.
The other three board members permitted its paralegal to conduct records searches on their Gmail accounts.
The lawsuit was filed against the board but also names Johnston as a defendant in her personal capacity. First Vice Chair of the Georgia Republican Party Salleigh Grubbs created a GiveSendGo campaign to accept donations to help fund Johnston’s legal defense in the case.
Critics of the fund say it presents a conflict of interest, as Grubbs has a rule proposal the board is scheduled to consider in December and other donors might also have business before the board.
The largest contribution to Johnston’s campaign — $10,000 — came from an anonymous donor.
John Fervier, the Gov. Brian Kemp-appointed chair of the board, said the settlement would apply to Johnston and the rest of the board.
The settlement agreement obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution said the board will instruct all staff to conduct business and communication on their official email accounts and not through personal email accounts, texts or other messaging platforms.
Once the settlement is finalized, the state board is required to pay $50,000 to American Oversight, according to the agreement.
The state board made national headlines last year when it passed a series of controversial, last-minute election rule changes ahead of the 2024 presidential contest. The Supreme Court of Georgia rejected some of the rules and decided the board lacks the authority to make new rules that go beyond state law.
American Oversight did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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