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The law's defenders include non-Trump-style Republicans, such as Gabriel Sterling, an official in the Georgia Secretary of State's office seen here, and Sen. "I don't think this is going to impede anyone's access to the ballot box," said Hood, a University of Georgia researcher and contributor to MIT's Election Lab network. He blames the press for doing a poor job explaining the law, which in his view has allowed people to distort and exaggerate it. In Trey Hood's view, this criticism is over the top. One academic who studies election administration has watched with incredulity as a cascade of negative attention fell onto his state. President Joe Biden has called it " Jim Crow on steroids" there was a corporate outcry lawsuits the move of baseball's all-star game from Atlanta to Denver and now boycotts by some conservatives against corporations criticizing it. Headlines have been dominated by reaction to Georgia's law: U.S. (Alyssa Pointer/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP) What the law does
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She calls it a throwback to the racist Jim Crow era. State lawmaker Park Cannon is seen here being arrested after trying to knock on the governor's office door to protest the law last month. The early attention has gone to Georgia because it's the first major state to pass such a law it's a swing state and it will host a key U.S. Republican lawmakers in dozens of states have rushed to introduce hundreds of bills with voting restrictions following last year's election loss. Georgia thus finds itself at the epicentre of a national battle over voting rights, with racial overtones. "What it definitely isn't is Jim Crow 2.0." "It's unfairly criticized," says Gabriel Sterling, a Republican Georgia state official who made international news a few months ago for publicly reprimanding Donald Trump. Its defenders call that description a fact-free calumny not based on anything in the actual law. "Jim Crow 2.0," is how Park Cannon, a Democratic state lawmaker arrested while protesting the bill, described it to CBC News. Opponents of the just-passed bill call it a modern-day version of racist old laws, known collectively as Jim Crow, that enforced segregation in the U.S. What exactly is unjust about it depends on who you talk to. It seems the one basic fact everyone can agree on with respect to Georgia's controversial new voting law is that an outrageous injustice has been committed.