I’ll be talking about voter suppression legislation and corporate power — in Texas, Georgia, and across the country — tonight at 8:30 PM EDT on @joinClubhouse.
Eliza is is the Voting Rights & Elections Counsel at Brennan Center, which is producing invaluable research. She's the preeminent expert on these bills.
We'll also be joined by Popular Information's researcher extraordinaire @tesszeeks, who has been neck deep in Excel to bring you the facts on:
2. Prior to Georgia's new law, there were four potential weekend early voting days and only one was mandatory and three were optional.
The new law makes two mandatory and two optional.
BUT major urban and suburban counties like Fulton County already used all four.
3. So if you like in Fulton or similar counties, where you'll find most of Georgia's Democrats and people of color, this second mandatory day does not expand access AT ALL.
It only expands access in rural Republican counties.
2. Yesterday, @Delta CEO Ed Bastian released a memo calling Georgia's new law to restrict voting "unacceptable," counter to Delta's values, and "based on a lie."
So will Delta continue to donate to the politicians that promoted the legislation?
@Delta 3. @Delta did not rule out future donations to the sponsors of voter suppression legislation in Georgia. Instead it send me this statement, which doesn't commit the company to any particular course of action.
@ATT 2. For example, @ATT posted a four-minute video to its corporate website documenting a trip that employees took to Selma, Alabama to honor John Lewis and others that fought for the right to vote
@ATT 3. In a corporate blog post last summer, AT&T acknowledged the role that corporations play in achieving justice, again citing the work of John Lewis as an example
2. One major bill, SB 7, would make it more difficult for people with disabilities to vote by requiring them to submit a form filled out by a doctor attesting they are physically unable to vote in person in order to receive an absentee ballot
3. The spike in apprehensions that begins in April 2020 tracks when the Trump administration began immediately deporting everyone for public health reasons.
Trump claims he had the authority under Section 42 of the US Code.