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In Georgia race, election denier distorts Brad Raffensperger’s use of a Zuckerberg grant
If Your Time is short
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In 2020, Mark Zuckerberg and his wife gave $65 million to the Center for Election Innovation & Research to distribute grants for states to provide nonpartisan voter outreach. Georgia received $5.6 million, making it one of 23 states, including those led by Republican and Democratic officials, to get funding.
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The couple also gave $350 million to the Center for Tech and Civic Life to distribute to 2,500 local jurisdictions to pay for extra expenses associated with the pandemic-era election. Dozens of counties in Georgia received money.
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Georgia Republican lawmakers joined other states and have since passed bans on private grants to election offices.
U.S. Rep. Jody Hice is running to be Georgia Secretary of State on a platform of false claims about the 2020 election.
Hice, who was endorsed by former President Donald Trump, says he will be tougher on election integrity than his Republican rival, incumbent Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.
Raffensperger drew Trump’s wrath after he disputed Trump’s false statements about a stolen election.
Hice told Fox 5 news anchor Russ Spencer on May 5 that the election "reeked of fraudulent activity." Spencer responded that the FBI, state investigators and Trump’s attorney general, Bill Barr, found no credible allegations of widespread fraud. Spencer asked Hice about a phone call that Trump had with Raffensperger on Jan. 2, 2021, when Trump made a raft of false claims, such as that thousands of dead people had voted.
Hice defended Trump, saying that there were other numbers Trump didn’t bring up, including the "$50 million of Zuckerberg money that Brad Raffensperger used to tip the scales."
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Hice’s campaign did not respond to our emails asking for his evidence. Hice’s statement gave a distorted picture of a grant awarded to the Georgia Secretary of State’s Office and inflated the size of that grant ninefold.
In 2020, election officials faced an expensive and unprecedented challenge: pulling off a safe national election during a pandemic. The 2020 pandemic relief package known as the CARES Act included $400 million in election funding. But that wasn’t enough to cover all of the new expenses, which would include a massive increase in voting by mail.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, stepped forward to help close the gap. The couple gave money to nonprofits to then award grants to election offices. The nonprofits selected the recipients, not Zuckerberg. The Center for Election Innovation & Research oversaw the distribution of about $65 million.
The center, founded in 2016 by David Becker — previously the director of the elections program at The Pew Charitable Trusts — works with secretaries of state to help them maintain accurate voter registration lists and secure election technology.
The goal of the grants was to help states pay for nonpartisan voter outreach. The center invited all states to apply. The 23 that responded received the amount of money they requested. Seven of those state agencies were led by Republican election officials, while 10 were led by Democratic election officials, and six were led by nonpartisan or bipartisan boards of elections. Georgia received about $5.6 million.
States could spend money on direct mail, ads, and other communications such as establishing voter hotlines. In Georgia, the money was spent on TV ads.
Hice said that Raffensperger used the money to "tip the scales" — suggesting Raffensperger wanted to aid or disadvantage a particular candidate. We found no evidence of such a scheme.
So where does Hice’s $50 million figure come from? It’s possible that he was referring to a separate set of grants, also from Zuckerberg, of $350 million to the Center for Tech and Civic Life. That organization distributed grants nationwide to 2,500 local elections offices. Dozens of counties in Georgia applied and received funds that added up to about $45 million. Local election offices used the grants to pay for staff, personal protective equipment and election equipment to sort absentee ballots.
Some Republican state lawmakers across the nation objected to populous Democratic strongholds getting the largest amounts of money although every jurisdiction in red and blue areas that applied received money. Grants ranged from $5,000 for small townships to $19 million for New York City.
Raffensperger’s office said that he had no authority to prevent counties from receiving the grants.
The Georgia State Assembly in 2021 was among many GOP-led states that later passed a ban on local election officials accepting private grants.
Hice is among the Republican candidates challenging Raffensperger in the May 24 primary. If no candidate wins more than 50%, the top two vote getters will advance to a June 21 runoff.
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Hice has repeatedly denied the reality that Biden won the presidential race. He backed the unsuccessful case before the U.S. Supreme Court that sought to overturn results in a few states including Georgia. Hice also objected to accepting Georgia’s electoral college votes on Jan. 6, 2021.
Hice told the Washington Post in February, "Yes, I believe Trump won. If we were to get an accurate count of the votes in Georgia, I believe absolutely Trump won Georgia." Raffensperger has defended his handling of the 2020 election in Georgia, where the results were backed up by three counts.
Hice said that Georgia’s secretary of state used "$50 million of Zuckerberg money" in 2020 to "tip the scales."
In 2020, the Secretary of State received a $5.6 million grant from the Center for Election Innovation and Research for nonpartisan voter outreach. But Georgia had plenty of company – 23 states, led by both Republican and Democrat officials, received grants. There is no evidence that Raffensperger used the money to "tip the scales."
Dozens of counties in Georgia received grants from the Center for Tech and Civic Life that added up to about $45 million, but Raffensperger had no say in which counties applied for grants. Both grant programs were funded byZuckerberg and his wife to help election officials cover the extra expenses of administering elections amid a pandemic.
Hice has distorted the amount of grant money received by Raffensperger and the purpose.
We rate this statement False.
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CLARIFICATION We updated the fact-check on March 15 to clarify that money from Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and wife Priscilla Chan to help with elections came from the couple themselves.
Our Sources
Fox 5 Atlanta, The Road to November: Rep. Jody Hice seeks GOP nod for Secretary of State, May 5, 2022
Center for Election Innovation and Research, CEIR 2020 Voter Education Grant Program, 2021
USA Today, Georgia secretary of state: Securing elections has overwhelming support among our voters, Feb. 12, 2021
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, DeKalb gets another $4.6M grant to help with elections, Dec. 15, 2020
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Georgia election bill rooted in Trump supporters’ complaints about 2020, March 24, 2022
Washington Post, Here’s the full transcript and audio of the call between Trump and Raffensperger. Jan. 5, 2021
Wall Street Journal, Georgia’s Brad Raffensperger Again at Center of Election Fight, March 6, 2022
U.S. Supreme Court, State of Texas vs Commonwealth of Pennsylvania et al, Dec. 10, 2020
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Hice launches challenge to Raffensperger in race for secretary of state, March 22, 2021
Washington Post, Who Wants to be a State Secretary of State? Everyone. Feb. 28, 2022
CNN, Fact check: Jody Hice, running to oversee Georgia elections, makes yet more false 2020 claims, May 4, 2022
PolitiFact, Here’s why Georgia’s Republican officials are confident in their presidential election results, Jan. 5, 2021
Georgia Secretary of State Office, Statement to PolitiFact, March 17, 2022
Email interview, David J. Becker, executive director and founder of The Center for Election Innovation & Research, May 18, 2022
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In Georgia race, election denier distorts Brad Raffensperger’s use of a Zuckerberg grant
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