Georgia's vote-counting method will soon be banned. Lawmakers will try to find a fix this week
Source: AP
Updated 1:10 PM EDT, June 14, 2026
ATLANTA (AP) When Georgia lawmakers return to the Capitol this week for a special session, they are expected to try to clean up an election mess of their own making.
The election system used throughout the political battleground state relies on a QR code printed on ballots to tally the votes. Legislators passed a law two years ago barring the use of that barcode for the official vote count beyond July 1 of this year, but no replacement method of tabulating votes was ever implemented.
One of the instructions Republican Gov. Brian Kemp laid out for lawmakers when he called the special session is to address issues created by that law. Meanwhile, the secretary of states office and the State Election Board have further muddied the waters by issuing conflicting guidance for county election officials about how votes should be cast and counted.
If the issues are not resolved soon, there is likely to be confusion and possibly litigation over the states elections after July 1. A special election to fill a U.S. House seat is scheduled for that month.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/georgia-ballots-qr-codes-legislature-special-session-7197f763b090285a5fc2f471aa374505