What A Day - The Gerrymandering Went Down In Georgia with Bee Nguyen
Episode Date: December 8, 2021Redistricting efforts are underway across the country, but it's become a contentious process. The Department of Justice, for example, filed a lawsuit against the newly drawn maps in Texas on Monday, a...rguing that the maps discriminate against voters of color.Today, we zero in on what redistricting efforts look like in Georgia, a battleground state that Republicans want to control . Democratic state lawmaker Bee Nguyen joins us to talk about the future of voting in the state of Georgia, along with her campaign for Georgia’s Secretary of State.Show Notes:Watch Crooked Media's "What A Year" – https://bit.ly/31saLoLFiveThirtyEight: "What Redistricting Looks Like In Every State" – https://53eig.ht/3pwx0SqFor a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
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It's Wednesday, December 8th. I'm Gideon Resnick.
And I'm Josie Duffy Rice, and this is What A Day,
the best thing to play at your company's holiday party when you want everyone to go home.
Yeah, close the open bar, throw on WOD, you're going to empty the room in seconds.
Even the best office parties, they have to end, you know,
and you should be the one to ruin the party.
We are your last call.
That's absolutely true.
So, HeyWOD squad, we're doing things a little differently today.
The What A Day team took part in Cricket's What A Year, a live stream event to raise money for the No Off Years Fund, which supports local elections and local activism.
That happened yesterday, so you can rewatch the broadcast now on YouTube to see all of your favorite people at Cricket play games,
read headlines, and more. Yes, I did not embarrass myself, we think. So we're going to devote our
whole show today to a special interview that's also about how important local elections are,
as well as fair representation. As you know, we've been covering the contentious issue of
redistricting, which only happens every 10 years after the U.S. Census results are announced.
It is extremely important because a single political party could take control
of what is otherwise an evenly divided state, and that is often exactly what happens.
As we reported about on yesterday's show, the Department of Justice filed a lawsuit
against the newly drawn maps in Texas, arguing that they discriminate against voters of color.
On top of redistricting, there's also the huge concern over voting rights in general
and the effort to deny voters, especially people of color, the right to cast a ballot.
Yeah, it's looking pretty scary.
Could be pretty bleak if we don't figure this out.
So we're going to zero in on what these issues look like in a state like mine in Georgia.
Republicans have taken several steps
to stay in control despite the clear signs that it's become a true battleground state.
Democrats have edged out Republicans in the last presidential race and the two most recent U.S.
Senate races as well. So that's why Democratic State Lawmaker Bee Nguyen has stepped up to run
for Georgia's Secretary of State and oversee the integrity of its elections. And so we've invited
her to be here with us. So Bea, thank you for joining us.
Thanks for having me on.
So what are your worries about the future of elections in Georgia and politics in Georgia
if someone like yourself isn't making sure that elections are free and fair?
Well, you know, I'm worried about our democracy as a whole.
And when I'm looking at what's happening in Georgia, I also know that it is not a silo. It is happening in many other states across our country. But Georgia is certainly an
important part of it. So what I tell people all the time is, look, this is no longer just about
our single state. If there is one secretary of state installed who is radical, like Jody Heiss,
for example, who is running in Georgia, who wanted to decertify the results of
the 2020 election, then we are in huge trouble because it's no longer about trying to delegitimize
the results of the 2020 election. It's setting us up for 2024, where Georgia could very well be the
deciding state. And if we install a secretary of state who is anti-democratic and refuses to
certify the results of the election,
then that is going to impact our entire country as a whole. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. And let's
talk about redistricting for a moment because Republicans fully control the process. They've
given themselves the advantage to hold a majority of seats in the state's General Assembly and
congressional delegation. So what does that mean specifically for people of color in Georgia?
Well, we knew that this was to be expected, right?
I mean, we're looking at a legislature controlled by Republicans on both the House and Senate side, and every single statewide seat is held by a Republican, and they control redrawing the maps.
And so we expected it to be iterations of maps that were not supported by both sides of the aisle. I think, you know, what is specifically troubling is when we're looking at a place like Georgia, we have gained a million people over the
last 10 years, and all of them are people of color. And we are not seeing that reflected in our maps.
And in fact, when we look at the congressional maps, we are looking at a reduction of one house
seat where they targeted Lucy McBath and drew her out of her district, basically.
And then on the House and Senate side, more specifically, we did not see them add one
single new majority minority district on the Senate side and, in fact, turned a majority
minority district currently held by Senator Au into a majority white district.
And so we're not seeing that equitable representation across the
board. And I think even more dangerous is the lack of competitive seats. We are going to see
increased polarization with no ability to compromise. And we are going to continue to see
that if you live in a certain district that's non-competitive, you are just not going to have a chance of having somebody who represents the same values as you do.
As you know, Republicans have been claiming that this was a very transparent redistricting process.
Do you think that that's true? Can you talk a little bit about what parts of the process
were not transparent? Yeah. I mean, when they were hosting these statewide hearings,
there were many limitations that were put in place.
For instance, there were no maps.
So if you were to show up as a citizen, you could not testify to the actual draft of the map itself.
The other portions were you couldn't ask any questions.
So you could show up for public testimony, but it wasn't necessarily true that any members of the committee would have to answer any of your questions.
And then I think something that was glaringly obvious was just the inequity in terms of not hosting any hearings in our major metro Atlanta counties like Gwinnett, like DeKalb, the lack of language access.
And we're looking at a state where total combined population of AAPI and Latino people in our state is close to 15 percent.
And not one single town hall was conducted in any other language than English.
And there were repeated calls for in-language access, and those were denied.
Right. I want to talk about the redistricting bills again.
They have been passed by state lawmakers on their way to be signed by Governor Brian Kemp. But are there any legal challenges? And could they come soon enough to bear an impact
before the 2022 elections? There will certainly be litigation. And I think that there will be
multiple lawsuits coming from different groups. And I don't feel optimistic that those will be
settled before the 2022 elections. So the maps that we see
now are probably the maps that are going to be in place for election season. We still are protected
under the 1965 Civil Rights Act, Section 2, specifically about deleting the voices of people
of color. Again, like when you look at the fact that a million people of color were added to our
population, and that is clearly not reflected in the map.
I'm more hopeful that we will be able to be successful in a legal challenge when it comes to that.
When it comes to voting restrictions, the state passed several earlier this year after kind of Donald Trump's real focus on Georgia when he was claiming that the election was stolen.
The state passed several voting restrictions that
took effect in time for this November's races. So what can you tell our audience about them and how
they have impacted the right of Georgians to cast a ballot? I would say that the restrictions put in
place around absentee ballot voting, we actually saw what that looked like and how it impacted a
voter's ability to have their ballot counted. So there are restrictions in terms of the time period in which you can actually
submit the request for an absentee ballot and when you can receive the absentee ballot.
All of those deadlines were shortened and compressed.
And so what we saw was people who never got their ballots.
And then what we also saw were ballots that were sent in late and didn't
count, which is pretty typical for absentee ballot voting in a state like Georgia, where it has to be
received by election day, not postmarked by election day. And then the restriction of secure
drop boxes, where you were not able to actually use a drop box the days leading up to the election. They were only available during the early voting period,
and they were only inside at an early voting location.
So no more getting off of work late and dropping your ballot off when you got off of work.
No more being last minute and saying, look, the election's on Tuesday.
I have my ballot.
I'll drop it off on Saturday, Sunday, Monday, or Tuesday.
You can't do any of those things anymore.
But certainly the biggest impact that we saw was a shortened timeframe that condensed the voters' ability to request an absentee ballot. And the AJC actually wrote an
article about it and said that of the number of people who requested an absentee ballot and did
not receive them, I think it was only 29% of those people who actually decided to show up at the polls and vote in person.
Wow.
I mean, I think for people who don't live in Georgia, it's important to kind of underscore
that it wasn't like it was super easy to vote here before.
Yeah.
And I think that what's lost in this conversation is how many people get disenfranchised by
some of these rules, right?
I mean, when you look at the
number of absentee ballots that are not counted, if you looked at the 2020 numbers, both in the
primary and the general, the overwhelming number of ballots not counted were ballots that arrived
late. And this is happening at the same time as the post office being dismantled. And when the
media covers this, nobody says, look, thousands of ballots were not
counted because they arrived late. They're still honing in on the messages of the big lie or one
or two cases that don't reflect what's actually going on. We haven't been able to overtake that
narrative of, look, the biggest problem is actually people are voting and their ballots aren't counted
because they're not arriving in time. And that's thousands of voters versus all the other things
that are talked about. Right. We have a lot more to discuss with Bee Nguyen about the future of
voting in the state of Georgia, along with her campaign for Georgia's secretary of state.
Yeah. So stay tuned. We'll be back with more of our conversation after some ads. And we're back.
We have with us B.U.N., a member of the Georgia House of Representatives, to talk about redistricting, voting rights, and ensuring fair elections.
I want to talk for a second about the Republican incumbent, Brad Raffensperger, the current Georgia Secretary of
State. While he resisted President Trump's demands to find him more votes from the 2020 election,
he actually blamed the idea that an election could be stolen essentially on Stacey Abrams.
Here he is on MSNBC in early November. She lost the state of Georgia in 2018 by 55,000 votes.
She questioned the legitimacy of our elections.
She actually then set the table, along with all the leaders, national Democrat leaders that
supported Stacey Abrams in her big lie, and set the table for President Trump then just to ramp
it up and take it to the next level. Yeah, so for those listening, there is a lot that people have
been raising their eyebrows at here. But what do you think is the actual root cause
for people's distrust for the electoral system?
I want to first say this.
It's a total false equivalency.
And it's irresponsible to suggest
that Stacey Abrams using litigation
to challenge restrictive voting laws
is the same as people making up lies
to overturn the results of the election.
And quite frankly, I'm disappointed that he is being painted as some sort of national hero.
I was on the ground in 2018, and a lot of the issues that were litigated in court were very valid issues.
An example is in Gwinnett County, we saw that absentee ballots were being rejected at a
much higher rate than other counties.
And when we looked at the numbers, voters of color were being targeted more often than
not.
That was litigated in court.
And that court litigation yielded a process for voters to cure our absentee ballots if
they were rejected for signature match or you
forgot to sign your ballot. That enabled both parties, and both parties did this, to create
canvassing efforts to ensure that voters understood how to fix your ballot if you are flagged.
That's the difference between 2018 and 2020. 2018 was legitimate issues on the ground that were identified and litigated.
Some issues were won in court, some were not. But they clearly had evidence to show that these were
problems that stem from the laws that we made in Georgia versus a bunch of lies, and they were lies,
to overturn the results of the election. You can't even compare the two
things. And what are the most important things that you do differently than Raffensperger if
elected? You know, it could be about restoring trust in that system, anything else that you
were thinking? It's a multi-pronged strategy, right? It is about restoring trust in the system,
and that absolutely has to happen by electing people who don't sow the seeds of doubt.
Right.
So Ravensburger is somebody I call a double speaker because on one hand, he says there
was no voter fraud.
We have the most secure election in the state of Georgia.
And then on the other hand, he's like, oh, no, but we need the Senate Bill 202.
And also we need to take over Fulton County Elections Board. And he continues to give oxygen to the premise that the election was flawed.
He just uses a different mechanism to do it in order to garner favor with Trump supporters
who will actually never support him again.
So removing folks who continue to predicate on that lie is really important.
I also think it is investing in voter education and outreach.
We currently have a secretary of state who does not believe it is the responsibility of the secretary of state itself to work in good faith to help voters understand the way in which the law has changed.
Now, when you think about Raffensperger, in 2020, he was sending around folks from the SOS to polling precincts. And one of them showed up at one of the polling precincts in my district
with a firearm in his hip to go inside and tell poll workers to remove all food and water. And everybody
was scared. And that is a tactic to instill fear in poll workers, but also voters. That should not
be the case at all. The Secretary of State's office needs to be a place that educates voters
and provides them with the necessary information to ensure that they can
vote and that they have confidence that their vote will be counted. I also think that we have
to tackle this massive election disinformation campaign that is impacting Georgians and everyone
across the country. As Secretary of State, I would build a division that solely focuses on election disinformation,
cybersecurity, and foreign interference.
And part of that methodology is when a threat is identified, to brief all 159 local election
boards on what those threats are and how to mitigate those, but also send a representative
to the communities at libraries, chambers of commerce, and build those partnerships so that people on the ground will start recognizing that the Secretary of State is
on their side. And so there's certainly a lot of things that I would do different from Raffensperger.
What you've seen in Georgia is something many voters elsewhere are experiencing as well. So
what's your advice on how they can get better involved to make change and influence the people
making these decisions?
Well, I think this is a long-term investment, right?
It can't be about one candidate or one election cycle.
And it is a lifelong commitment to preserving our democracy.
And so, you know, I think that absolutely we need to keep pressure on Congress to pass
federal voting rights protection. I was in D.C. a couple times
this year to call for that, including a couple months ago where 25 of us were arrested. The first
time there was civil disobedience, it was five people being arrested. The next time when I was
there, it was 25 of us. And the last time they did it was over 200 people. So continuing to make that
call for federal voting rights protection is critical
to it. Second, I think, obviously, ensuring that you can invest in candidates who are going to be
pro-democracy candidates at every level of government. You know, the other side of the aisle
knows this very well, and they have a really coordinated and sophisticated campaign to tackle
every level of government, including our school boards.
And they are making ground on that.
So we need to pay attention to every single office and make sure that we are supporting people in those places who are pro-democracy candidates.
I think something that has been incredibly helpful also has been the infrastructure on voting protection. I have
done voter protection work as a poll monitor and as a ballot cure. And those are the unsexy things
that we all need to do collectively in order to mitigate the damage that we're seeing with voter
suppression laws. And then invest in the organizations in your own state and in your local area who will
have infrastructure on the ground, rooted in community, and will stay there after an
election cycle and who will do the engagement 365 days a year, even if there is not an election
that particular cycle. And I think it's just the recognition that we are in this for the long term,
that democracy is not guaranteed,
that we have to actively be committed to preserving it every single day,
and that our country is not one that is incapable of sliding backwards. And I think that's probably one of the biggest mental and emotional blocks that we face,
where we are seeing the red flags on the wall, all the warning signs are there.
For folks who are paying attention to it, the alarm bells are there.
But I think for the most part, we want to believe it would never happen to America. And because we have that
mental and emotional block, we let our guard down around it. But the reality is we're in a place
where the decisions that we make now around our democracy are going to impact us indefinitely. We only have a few chances left to get this right.
And if we pass up those handful of chances, we will be in a constitutional crisis indefinitely.
Yeah, that is scary and sobering, but we are glad that people like you are fighting the fight.
So thank you so much for joining us. That's Buen, Democratic state
lawmaker in Georgia and a candidate for Georgia's Secretary of State. Yeah, we're gonna link to more
resources in our show notes. So you can find out about how you can get involved in your own local
races, how to guarantee fair elections where you are, plus the stream of Crooked Special. What a year. that is all for today if you like the show make sure you subscribe leave a review add our podcast
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I'm Gideon Resnick.
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