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After Joe Biden narrowly won Georgia, and the Democrats won a pair of Senate races, Republican lawmakers there have proposed dozens of measures that would overhaul how Georgia voters cast ballots in future elections. One sweeping elections bill , Georgia House Bill 531, would limit the locations of absentee ballot drop boxes, require more identification for absentee voting and limit weekend early voting. Facebook posts said the state legislation makes it a misdemeanor to give food or water to voters waiting in line. The Facebook post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.) In this case, the post is accurate. A state bill would expressly ban giving food or water to voters in line, which is more explicit than existing law that broadly bans gifts to voters. Georgia is one of many states where Republican lawmakers have introduced bills that restrict voting access, despite the fact that Republican election officials said the 2020 election was secure. Georgia bill would make food giveaways to voters a crime Georgia HB 531 has a section that prohibits any money or gifts, including, but not limited to, food and drink, to an elector. Such giveaways will be banned within 150 feet of a building where people are voting, within any polling place or within 25 feet of any voter standing in line. The bill would make a violation a misdemeanor that carries a maximum fine of $1,000 and maximum imprisonment of up to one year in jail. The bill passed the House 97-72 on March 1 and awaits a vote in the Senate. For years, voting rights advocates have organized efforts to give away bottles of water or food near voting sites where residents sometimes wait in line for hours to vote. Voters in black-majority neighborhoods have had disproportionate waiting times. Ideally no one would wait (to vote) more than 30 minutes, but that’s not the reality, said Andrea Young, executive director of the ACLU of Georgia. Generally, some of the larger food events are organized by those with ties to the left, although they make the food available to anyone. Pizza to the Polls told PolitiFact that it delivered more than 7,000 boxes of pizza and more than 65,000 snacks during the general election and Senate runoff. The group was co-founded by a 2016 Obama field organizer but says it is nonpartisan : Ain’t nothing partisan about trying to make voting less of a drag, it says on its website. Chef José Andrés’ World Central Kitchen, as part of its Chefs for the Polls project, brought tacos, sandwiches and pizza to lines of voters in Georgia in 2020, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported. The group is also nonpartisan, but Andres supported Biden’s candidacy. Georgia law already bans gifts to voters Existing Georgia law bans giving gifts for the purpose of registering as a voter, voting, or voting for a particular candidate. That provision doesn’t mention food or water directly, but the Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger has interpreted it to include food or water. In February, the Georgia elections board referred for investigation to prosecutors a couple of cases in which candidates gave food or water to voters. Matthew Wilson bought four pizzas and passed out slices to those in line to vote in 2018, according to Reporter Newspapers . Wilson, a Democrat who won his race for state representative, said he distributed the pizza after getting permission from a poll manager. Kelly Rose, a Democrat who lost a state senate race, told PolitiFact that her team handed out water, oranges and chips at a 2020 polling site. A woman passed out one day we were there, Rose told PolitiFact. Rose said she didn’t campaign at the site and didn’t break the law. (A state law bans soliciting votes within 150 feet of a building where voting takes place.) We reached out to the chief author of HB 531, Republican Rep. Barry Fleming, to ask why the state needs a law to ban giveaways to voters in line when state law already bans gifts, but we didn’t hear back. Our ruling Facebook posts state that the Georgia House passed a bill that makes it a misdemeanor to give food or water to voters waiting in line. HB 531, which passed the House March 1, bans giving food and drinks to electors within 150 feet of a building where people are voting, within any polling place or within 25 feet of any voter standing in line. A violation is considered a misdemeanor. We rate this claim True. RELATED: Fact-checking misleading attacks on the HR 1 voting rights bill
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