Logo: The Washington Times

SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) - In a story Dec. 4 about the runoff election for Georgia secretary of state, The Associated Press erroneously reported the statewide office has no law enforcement role.

According to Candice Broce, a spokeswoman for the secretary of state’s office, the office has an investigations division. The division employs certified law enforcement officers tasked with investigating suspected violations of election laws as well as licensing, charity and securities violations.

A corrected version of the story is below:

GOP’s Raffensperger wins runoff for Georgia elections chief

Republican Brad Raffensperger has been elected Georgia’s new elections chief amid a debate over access to the polls and election security

By RUSS BYNUM

Associated Press

SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) - Republican Brad Raffensperger won a runoff election Tuesday to become Georgia’s next secretary of state, taking over the office at the center of a debate over voter access and election security in the Southern state.

Raffensperger, a state lawmaker from suburban Atlanta, defeated former Democratic congressman John Barrow to become Georgia’s top elections official, the office vacated by Gov.-elect Brian Kemp.

At his victory party late Tuesday, Raffensperger told supporters he would faithfully carry out elections in Georgia.

“I’m going to make sure that elections are clean, fair and accurate,” he said. “And that’s the No. 1 priority as your next secretary of state.”

A statement from Barrow early Wednesday said, “…we need to make sure that every voice is heard” and that he’ll wait for the remaining ballots to come in and be counted.

The runoff campaign played out against the backdrop of Democratic accusations that Kemp used his position as secretary of state to suppress minority turnout and increase his own odds of victory. Kemp insists that’s false, pointing to large increases in voter registration on his watch and record turnout in the Nov. 6 midterms.

Raffensperger finished the three-way general election race ahead of Barrow, but just shy of the 50 percent of the vote needed to avoid a runoff. Issues that dogged Kemp in the general election - Georgia’s strict “exact match” policy for confirming voters’ identities and reports that the state’s aging electronic voting system was vulnerable to hackers - became the focus of the race to succeed him.

Both Raffensperger and Barrow promised to replace Georgia’s voting machines with a system that produces paper records that could be used to audit elections if needed.

Meanwhile, Raffensperger pledged to continue Kemp’s practices of strictly enforcing voter ID laws and pruning registration rolls of inactive voters to prevent voting fraud. Barrow said Georgia needed to make it less difficult to cast ballots.

Casting their ballots for Raffensperger in Atlanta’s Buckhead neighborhood, Julia Chabannes and her husband Jimmy Cook, both 69, said they were skeptical about Democratic assertions that voters were disenfranchised by Kemp’s policies.

“If there was a million people disenfranchised, they’ve been disenfranchised a long time because...

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