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Brad Raffensperger From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigationJump to search Ambox current red.svg This article may be affected by a current event. Information in this article may change rapidly as the event progresses. Initial news reports may be unreliable. The last updates to this article may not reflect the most current information. Please feel free to improve this article (but note that updates without valid and reliable references will be removed) or discuss changes on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Brad Raffensperger Brad Raffensperger.jpg Raffensperger, 2018 29th Secretary of State of Georgia Incumbent Assumed office January 14, 2019 Governor Brian Kemp Preceded by Robyn Crittenden Member of the Georgia House of Representatives from the 50th district In office February 10, 2015 – January 14, 2019 Preceded by Lynne Riley Succeeded by Angelika Kausche Personal details Born May 18, 1955 (age 65) Political party Republican Education University of Western Ontario (BS) Georgia State University (MBA)


Bradford Jay Raffensperger, (18 mei 1955) [1][2] is een Amerikaanse politicus, zakenman en civiel ingenieur uit de staat Georgia. Hij dient daar als Republikein als staatsecretaris.

He previously served in the Georgia House of Representatives, representing District 50. In the aftermath of the 2020 US presidential election, a scandal took place in which President Donald Trump attempted to persuade Raffensperger to change the votes count in Georgia, during a recorded phone call on January 2, 2021. As a response, Raffensberger has stated "the truth will come out".[3][4]


Contents 1 Education 2 Career 2.1 Johns Creek City Council 2.2 Georgia House of Representatives 2.3 Georgia Secretary of State 2.3.1 2018 election 2.3.2 2020 primary and general elections 2.3.3 Trump–Raffensperger scandal 3 Personal life 4 Notes 5 References 6 External links Education

Raffensperger earned a bachelor's degree in civil engineering from the University of Western Ontario and a Master of Business Administration from Georgia State University.[5]

Career Raffensperger is the CEO of Tendon Systems, LLC, a contracting and engineering firm that operates in Columbus, Georgia, and Forsyth County, Georgia.[5] He amassed a net worth of $26.5 million from his work in the private sector.[6]

Johns Creek City Council Raffensperger is a lifelong Republican.[7] He served on the Post 2 seat of the Johns Creek City Council from 2012 to 2014.[8][9][10] He replaced Dan McCabe on the City Council.[9] He resigned in 2014 to run for the special election to represent the 50th district in the Georgia House, and was succeeded by Chris Coughlin.[10]

Georgia House of Representatives Raffensperger subsequently won his bid to the Georgia House in 2015, succeeding Lynne Riley.[1][11][12]

In the state House, Raffensperger sponsored legislation to bar county officials from personally profiting from tax liens. Previously, the Fulton County tax commissioner personally collected fees from tax liens and sales of tax liens to private collection companies, allowing him to amass $200,000 over a four-year period. The legislation ended this self-enrichment practice.[13] Raffensperger also sponsored a measure to amend the Georgia state constitution to allow the re-creation of a county that previously existed but had later merged with another county; the measure would allow northern Fulton County to split off to form Milton County.[14]

Georgia Secretary of State 2018 election Raffensperger ran for the Secretary of State of Georgia in the 2018 election.[15] The Secretary of State in Georgia oversees elections[16] and is chairman of the state election board.[17] The Secretary of State also oversees business registration and occupational licensing.[16]

In the Republican Party primary, Raffensperger faced former Alpharetta mayor David Belle Isle, state Representative Buzz Brockway, and state representative Josh McKoon.[18] In the primary, Raffensperger came in first place and Belle Isle came in second place; because no candidate obtained a majority, the race for the Republican nomination went to a primary runoff,[19] which Raffensperger won.[16] During his campaign, Raffensperger "said he would reduce government bureaucracy, support voter ID laws and push for verifiable paper ballots when Georgia replaces its electronic voting machines."[16]

In the November 6, 2018, general election, Raffensperger finished with the most votes, leading Democrat John Barrow by less than one percent.[20] He defeated Barrow in a runoff election on December 4, 2018.[21]

2020 primary and general elections See also: Attempts to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election In 2020, the Georgia presidential primaries, originally set for March 24, were moved to May 19 (the date for non-presidential primaries in Georgia), due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[22][23] Later, Raffensperger further postponed the Georgia primaries to June 9 due to the coronavirus crisis.[24] During the 2020 Georgia elections, Raffensperger sought to prevent Georgia polling places from printing paper backups of voter registration and absentee voting information in case polling places would struggle to use voter check-in tablets, called Poll Pads, which had been problematic in Georgia's primary elections in June 2020. The tablets had caused long lines at polling places. Voting rights groups had requested paper backups to prevent a risk of chaos on election day in case the tablets failed.[25] The voting rights groups sued Raffensperger in federal court; they obtained an order from a district judge ordering Georgia election officials to prepare such paper backups, but this order was blocked by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit.[25]

To protect voting rights during the pandemic, Raffensperger directed the mailing of absentee (mail-in) ballot applications to all of Georgia's 6.9 million active registered voters for the state's June 2020 primary.[22][23][a] After David Ralston, the Republican speaker of the state House, said that expanded use of mail-in voting would "be extremely devastating to Republicans and conservatives in Georgia," Republicans on a Georgia state House committee advanced legislation to block election officials from sending mail-in ballot request forms to voters ahead of elections.[23] Raffensperger pushed back on the proposal, saying: "By a wide margin, voters on both sides of the political spectrum agree that sending absentee applications to all active voters was the safest and best thing our office could do to protect our voters at the peak of COVID-19. Some seem to be saying that our office should have ignored the wave of absentee voting that was clearly coming."[23] After encountering opposition, the proposed ban died in the Georgia General Assembly.[27]

Raffensperger did not send out mail-in ballot applications to every active registered voter in Georgia for the November 2020 general election, citing the cost of a mass mailing.[28] Rather, Raffensperger created an online portal for Georgia voters to request absentee ballots.[28] He encouraged voters to take advantage of in-person early voting and mail-in voting.[29]

The November 2020 general election in Georgia went smoothly, avoiding the problems that had plagued the primary election in June; Raffensperger credited the successful process to the record numbers of voters who cast ballots before Election Day, either by mail or during Georgia's three-week period of in-person early voting.[30] Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden became president-elect, defeating incumbent Donald Trump, and Democrats made gains in Georgia, with Biden winning the state, the first time since 1992 that a Democratic presidential nominee had won Georgia.[31][32][33]

After the election, Raffensperger's fellow Republicans, Georgia's U.S. Senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler issued a joint statement accusing Raffensperger of unspecified "failures" and calling for him to resign.[32][33] Perdue and Loeffler offered no evidence in support of their claims, which they made after pressure from Trump, who had promoted conspiracy theories about the election and falsely claimed it was rigged.[32][33][34] State elections officials and other Republican leaders noted that there was no evidence of wrongdoing in connection with the election.[33] Both Perdue and Loeffler were up for re-election but failed to achieve a majority of the vote, triggering a runoff election in Georgia against their Democratic opponents, which is set to take place on January 5, 2021, and will determine party control of the Senate.[32][33] Raffensperger rejected the calls for his resignation, saying, "As a Republican, I am concerned about Republicans keeping the U.S. Senate. I recommend that Senators Loeffler and Perdue start focusing on that."[32] Raffensperger added, "If I was Senator Perdue, I'd be irritated I was in a runoff. And both Senators and I are all unhappy with the potential outcome for our President."[32]

Under pressure from fellow Republicans, Raffensperger ordered a statewide hand recount/audit of all 5 million votes in the Georgia presidential race, in which Biden led Trump by approximately 14,000 votes. Critics, including the voting-rights group Coalition for Good Governance, described Raffensperger's decision to go forward with the hand recount being motivated by the political pressure he had received from Trump, and said it was not contemplated by Georgia law.[34][35][36] Raffensperger denied this,[34][35][36] although he did say that fellow Republicans were pressuring him to find ways to exclude legal ballots.[37] Raffensperger said that South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham pressured him in a call to throw out postal ballots favoring Biden. Though Graham denied the allegations, a separate Republican[38] election official who was also present in the call, Gabriel Sterling, confirmed Raffenperger's statement.[39] Doug Collins, a Republican congressman from Georgia who lost his race and oversaw Trump's efforts in Georgia, falsely claimed fraud in the Georgia election, prompting Raffensperger, typically known for his mild manner, to call Collins a "liar" and "charlatan" for his rhetoric.[37][40][7] The hand recount reaffirmed Biden's victory, with Biden receiving 2.47 million votes and Trump receiving 2.46 million votes, a margin of 12,670 votes (0.25%). On November 20, Raffensperger certified the final vote totals, and Georgia Governor Brian Kemp issued the formal certification of the state's slate of electors.[31] Trump continued to promote false claims about the electoral process after certification; some Trump supporters harassed or threatened Raffensperger, his wife, and Raffensperger aide Sterling, the state voting system implementation manager; Sterling publicly called on Trump to condemn the acts and "Stop inspiring people to commit potential acts of violence."[41][42]

Trump–Raffensperger scandal See also: Trump–Raffensperger scandal A recording of an hour-long phone call between US President Donald Trump and Raffensperger was obtained by The Washington Post on January 3, 2021.[43] In the audio recording, Raffensperger was purportedly pressured into changing the election results for the state of Georgia by the president.[44][4] The phone call included Trump attempting, albeit unsuccessfully, to pressure Raffensperger into overturning the election results. Trump was recorded saying "I just want to find 11,780 votes."[45] Raffensperger repeatedly rebuffed Trump's attempts to pressure him. The taped call was leaked. Journalist Carl Bernstein has called it "far worse than Watergate", and in any other presidency would result in impeachment, conviction, and bipartisan demands for the president's resignation.[46] In an interview which aired on the January 4, 2021 edition of ABC's Good Morning America, Raffesperger acknowledged the phone call, stating that Trump "did most of the talking," and described Trump's voter fraud allegations as "just plain wrong."[47] Also on January 4, Democratic congressional leaders, believing Trump "engaged in solicitation of, or conspiracy to commit, a number of election crimes", requested the FBI to investigate the incident.[48] In addition, while some House Republicans tried to defend Trump's Georgia call, Democrats began drafting a censure resolution.[49]

Personal life Raffensperger and his wife, Tricia, have three children.[5] Raffensperger has four siblings. Trump has falsely claimed that Raffensperger has a brother, Ron, who "works for China", but Raffensperger does not have a brother named Ron.[50]

Notes

The Georgia Association of Latino Elected Officials and other civil rights groups sued the Georgia Secretary of State's Office and the Gwinnett County elections board in federal court, arguing that the mailing of mail-in ballot applications (which were only in English) should also have been sent in the Spanish language in Gwinnett County, which has a large Spanish-speaking population. The suit was dismissed in October 2020 by U.S. District Judge William M. Ray II, who ruled that the plaintiffs lacked standing and the English-only mailings did not violate the Voting Rights Act.[26]

References