Добавить новость
News in English

Новости сегодня на DirectAdvert

Новости сегодня от Adwile

Racist slurs and death threats: Inside the dangerous life of a Georgia elections official



DOUGLASVILLE, Ga. — When Milton Kidd leaves work at the end of the day, he slips out the back door of the domed Douglas County Courthouse, avoiding the public entrance where people might berate him or demand his home address.

He never takes the same route home two days in a row, and he makes random turns to avoid being followed.

Kidd, a Black man, has a very dangerous job: He is the elections and voter registration director for Douglas County.

“Milton Kidd is a nasty n----- living on tax money like the scum he is,” one voter wrote in an email Kidd shared with Stateline. “Living on tax money, like a piece of low IQ n----- shit.”

Another resident from Kidd’s county of 149,000 west of Atlanta left him a voicemail.

“I don’t know if you’re aware, Milton, but the American people have set a precedent for what they do to f---ing tyrants and oppressors who occupy government office,” the caller said. “Yep, back in the 1700s, they were called the British and the f---ing American people got so fed up with the f----ing British being dicks, kind of like you, and then they just f---ing killed all the f---ing British.”

Kidd smiled incredulously as he shared his security routine and the hate-filled messages that inspired it. He is dumbfounded that he’s the target of such vitriol for administering elections in 2024 — but he knows where it originated.

In face of threats, election workers vow: ‘You are not disrupting the democratic process’

The lies told by former President Donald Trump, who faces state felony charges for trying to pressure Georgia officials to change the 2020 results, have resonated with many Douglas County voters, Kidd said. Now this nonpartisan official, like many others across the country, is forced to face their ire.

“It’s an idea that has become insidious in the mindsets of Americans, that because a single individual did not win an election, that now I can behave like this,” said Kidd, who has a thick beard and wears a thumb-size crystal on a black string around his neck.

As he prepares for the next presidential election, Kidd said he will continue to press his state’s elected officials for more leadership and money to protect him, his staff and the democratic process.

“If this office fails, then our democracy has failed,” he said. “I will never let a detractor who calls with vile language deter me from the work that I do.”

‘Like standing in a puddle of gasoline’

Kidd is far from the only election official who has faced threats inspired by the lies of Trump and his allies, who continue to claim without evidence that the 2020 presidential election was stolen.

Nationally, 38% of local election officials have experienced threats, harassment or abuse since 2020 just for doing their jobs, according to a survey released in May by the Brennan Center for Justice, a voting rights nonprofit housed at the New York University School of Law. More than half of the over 900 respondents said they are concerned about the safety of their colleagues and staff.

If this office fails, then our democracy has failed. I will never let a detractor who calls with vile language deter me from the work that I do.

– Milton Kidd, elections and voter registration director for Douglas County, Ga.

Kidd’s colleagues in neighboring counties also have felt the hostility.

In the green hills of Bartow County, a rural community in northwest Georgia, Election Supervisor Joseph Kirk has taken steps to protect himself, though he won’t disclose specifics. While harassment has not reached the level it has in other counties, he said he has lost staff members who left their positions because of the changed atmosphere.

“There’s a lot more animosity now,” he said in his Cartersville office, a red-brick building 4 miles from Main Street.

Cobb County Director of Elections Tate Fall is also fortifying her suburban Atlanta elections office. In the coming weeks, her office will install a shatterproof safety film on the glass that shields the front desk. More access points will require key cards for entry, and there will be additional panic buttons.

“It’s very surreal,” she said. “In the office, people have become so desensitized to people yelling at them that they don’t consider a lot a threat anymore.”

At least a dozen states have enacted new protections for local election officials in recent years, including boosting criminal penalties for those who threaten or harass them.

This month, Georgia officials announced a first-in-the-nation requirement that all new police officers undergo a course on election security, partly focusing on protecting election officials from threats.

Fearing political violence, more states ban firearms at polling places

This is part of a broader mission to build more coordination between sheriff’s offices and elections offices, said Chris Harvey, deputy executive director of the Georgia Police Officer Training and Standards Council, which will lead the effort.

Harvey, a former detective, also served as Georgia’s state elections director for six years, including through the 2020 presidential election.

After the January 2021 U.S. Senate runoff, he was doxed — his home address and a picture of his house were posted online. He also received an emailed death threat that included a photo of him with crosshairs over his face.

While he says he wasn’t worried about his safety, he did worry about his wife and four children at home. He called the local police, who posted a car in front of his house for two weeks.

“In this supercharged environment, it’s like standing in a puddle of gasoline,” he told Stateline. “Anything can set it off. It didn’t used to be like that.”

The democratic path

Democracy’s fragile promise has always been part of Kidd’s life.

Kidd, 39, grew up in East St. Louis, Illinois, a former manufacturing hub of 18,000 people along the Mississippi River.

His family was part of the Great Migration, moving north from Southern states such as Arkansas and Mississippi looking for work and safety. But shortly after his ancestors’ arrival, white mobs killed hundreds of Black newcomers during several months of 1917, displacing 6,000 Black people in the southern Illinois city.

His grandmother was a sharecropper in Luxor, Arkansas, and instilled in his mother the importance of voting. Growing up, he heard stories about civil rights activists Fannie Lou Hamer, who was beaten for registering voters, and Medgar Evers, who was assassinated. It made Kidd a student of history, able to recite the Declaration of Independence and parts of the Constitution.

“The importance of the ballot box has always been something that has been stressed to me,” he said. “I know in my own family individuals have tried to register to vote and had dogs sicced on them. These are not words in a book. It’s not that far off.”

Inspired by his father, who left school in the ninth grade to work, and his mother, who received a college education later in her life, Kidd earned his master’s degree in public administration from Southern Illinois University Edwardsville in 2010.

He then did what he called a “reverse migration” back to the South to begin working elections in various counties in the Atlanta area, including Douglas County. He started there in 2015 and was promoted to lead the office three years later.

In that time, Kidd has seen the election environment turn nasty.

“We’ve reshaped this nation into an uglier, vile, vitriolic spirit that we’re just allowing to continue to manifest,” he said last month.

The elections staff for Douglas County, Ga., work behind locked doors in the basement of the domed courthouse in Douglasville, Ga. Matt Vasilogambros/Stateline

He and his eight full-time staff members have attempted to bolster their public standing by going to local churches, fairs and political party meetings of both parties to share details about how they run elections and tabulate the vote securely.

But he needs more resources from the state. The same lawmakers who wink and nod at the lie that massive fraud is stealing elections do not support additional funding for local election administration, he said, especially for the safety of election administrators.

Every one of the security enhancements he made to his office — including a series of magnetic locks on the doors — came through outside grant funding, a practice the state later outlawed in 2021.

Some of Kidd’s staff members have quit, and he’s finding it hard to fill the temporary positions that allow elections to run smoothly. Constant turnover can lead to errors, which leads to more distrust. The workers who have stayed are still fearful.

“On election night, my husband definitely waits for me to get home,” said Tesha Green, the county’s deputy elections director. “You have to always make sure that no one’s there when we’re leaving out the door.”

Cash-strapped election offices have fewer resources after bans on private grants

Kidd was encouraged by Georgia’s announcement that it would require all new police officers to undergo a course on election security. Does Kidd feel supported by his local sheriff’s office? He chuckled and said there’s a lot more that could be done.

Cpt. Trent Wilson of the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office said the office took Kidd’s complaints seriously. Though they were concerning, he said, there was nothing criminal in the voicemails and emails Kidd received.

“It was very distasteful,” Wilson said. “But just because they’re distasteful don’t mean they’re criminal.”

Pressed about what constitutes a threat, he added: “Look, I’m a Black man. So, we don’t like to be called a n-----. But calling someone a n---- is not a crime.”

When election season comes, he said the sheriff’s office boosts security, adding more deputies to the courthouse. Visitors already must pass through metal detectors, he noted.

As head of the election office, Kidd knows he’s a target, and he’s accepted that. But he worries about his staff, many of whom are older women who don’t feel safe walking to their cars at night. And, closer to home, he worries that if something happens to him, no one will be able to take care of his beloved dogs, Kleo and Knight.

“In 2024, I work a job that I have to allow myself to be called a n-----,” he said. “But I do it because I want to make sure people have access to the ballot box.”

Stateline is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Stateline maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Scott S. Greenberger for questions: info@stateline.org. Follow Stateline on Facebook and X.

Читайте на 123ru.net

Другие проекты от 123ru.net



Архангельск

Спортсмены из Архангельской области взяли серебро и бронзу на чемпионате России по пулевой стрельбе



Мода

«Авиаторы» возглавили рейтинг самых популярных солнцезащитных очков у россиян – «585*ЗОЛОТОЙ»




Українські новини

Робота водієм у Таксі 571 (Київ)



Новости 24 часа

Вебкам-студия MONTANA в Санкт-Петербурге



Game News

Прохождение элитного подземелья «Лесной алтарь» в Tarisland



Москва

Состоялась церемония вручения премии Men Today Trends



News Every Day

Mets survive late barrage to beat Yankees in Subway Series opener



Блоги

Театр и Цирк, Культура и Концерт, Россия и Дети: на фестиваль в Якутск приехали директора крупнейших цирков и продюсеры, профессиональные артисты



Москва

Тарифы ЖКХ, госпошлины, алкоголь: жизнь россиян подорожает в июле



Алсу

Алсу отказалась от предложения мужа сохранить семью: "Развод состоится"



Москва

Ефимов: 3 объекта образования возведут в Гольянове по программе реновации



Уимблдон

Теннисист из Казахстана не сумел пробиться в основной раунд Уимблдона-2024



Москва

Врач дерматолог-косметолог Мадина Байрамукова: что делать, если вас ужалила медуза



Газпром

Отношения с Ираном постепенно накачиваются // «Газпром» хочет закрепиться на Ближнем Востоке



Симферополь

В Симферополе пройдут антитеррористические учения



Москва

Врач дерматолог-косметолог Мадина Байрамукова: что делать, если вас ужалила медуза



Москва

Собянин поздравил Московский продюсерский центр с юбилеем



Москва

Аромат романса и романтика слова – звезды оперной сцены представили I Международный фестиваль «Мир классического романса»



103news.com — быстрее, чем Я..., самые свежие и актуальные новости Вашего города — каждый день, каждый час с ежеминутным обновлением! Мгновенная публикация на языке оригинала, без модерации и без купюр в разделе Пользователи сайта 103news.com.

Как добавить свои новости в наши трансляции? Очень просто. Достаточно отправить заявку на наш электронный адрес mail@29ru.net с указанием адреса Вашей ленты новостей в формате RSS или подать заявку на включение Вашего сайта в наш каталог через форму. После модерации заявки в течении 24 часов Ваша лента новостей начнёт транслироваться в разделе Вашего города. Все новости в нашей ленте новостей отсортированы поминутно по времени публикации, которое указано напротив каждой новости справа также как и прямая ссылка на источник информации. Если у Вас есть интересные фото Вашего города или других населённых пунктов Вашего региона мы также готовы опубликовать их в разделе Вашего города в нашем каталоге региональных сайтов, который на сегодняшний день является самым большим региональным ресурсом, охватывающим все города не только России и Украины, но ещё и Белоруссии и Абхазии. Прислать фото можно здесь. Оперативно разместить свою новость в Вашем городе можно самостоятельно через форму.

Другие популярные новости дня сегодня


Новости 24/7 Все города России





Топ 10 новостей последнего часа




Новости России

Суд в Кемерове вынес приговор заказчику убийства известного адвоката

В Московской области сотрудники Росгвардии проводят акцию «Каникулы с Росгвардией»

Преимущества карты строек жилых и промышленных объектов в России

Как выбрать лучший строительный субподряд


Москва

Аромат романса и романтика слова – звезды оперной сцены представили I Международный фестиваль «Мир классического романса»






Rss.plus

СЕНСАЦИЯ О ДЕЛАХ ЖУРНАЛИСТОВ ГОЛУНОВА И САФРОНОВА.

Филиал № 4 ОСФР по Москве и Московской области информирует: Родители 240,5 тыс. детей в Московской области получают единое пособие

Врач дерматолог-косметолог Мадина Байрамукова: что делать, если вас ужалила медуза

Вебкам-студия MONTANA в Санкт-Петербурге

Moscow.media
Москва

Собянин заявил, что транспортная доступность Мневниковской поймы будет улучшена



103news.comмеждународная интерактивная информационная сеть (ежеминутные новости с ежедневным интелектуальным архивом). Только у нас — все главные новости дня без политической цензуры. "103 Новости" — абсолютно все точки зрения, трезвая аналитика, цивилизованные споры и обсуждения без взаимных обвинений и оскорблений. Помните, что не у всех точка зрения совпадает с Вашей. Уважайте мнение других, даже если Вы отстаиваете свой взгляд и свою позицию. 103news.com — облегчённая версия старейшего обозревателя новостей 123ru.net.

Мы не навязываем Вам своё видение, мы даём Вам объективный срез событий дня без цензуры и без купюр. Новости, какие они есть — онлайн (с поминутным архивом по всем городам и регионам России, Украины, Белоруссии и Абхазии).

103news.com — живые новости в прямом эфире!

В любую минуту Вы можете добавить свою новость мгновенно — здесь.

Музыкальные новости

Анна Нетребко

Нетребко осталась без мужа — браку оперной дивы пришел конец




Спорт в России и мире

Алексей Смирнов – актер, которого, надеюсь, еще не забыли

Сотрудник Управления Росгвардии по Пермскому краю стал серебряным призером чемпионата по гирьевому спорту

Спортсмены из Мытищ победители на соревнованиях по акробатическому рок-н-роллу

Подведены Итоги Национальной Премии «Спорт и Россия - 2024»


Уимблдон

Теннисист из Казахстана не сумел пробиться в основной раунд Уимблдона-2024



Новости Крыма на Sevpoisk.ru


Москва

Собянин рассказал о работе московских центров ментального здоровья



Частные объявления в Вашем городе, в Вашем регионе и в России