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Voting Delays, Long Lines Hamper Georgia Primaries

Hong Kong Leader Tells Locals to Be Good Citizens for China on Anniversary of Million-Strong Protest

One year after Hong Kong witnessed the dramatic escalation of ongoing anti-CCP, pro-democracy protests, city leader Carrie Lam has requested for Hongkongers to leave behind the chaos of the past year to become good citizens of China its the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP). “The immediate issue is to prove that ‘one country, two systems’ work well in Hong Kong,” Lam said in her weekly press conference on June 9. “[T]o prove that Hong Kong people are reasonable and sensible citizens of the People’s Republic of China—that we could be trusted to continue to have our own way of life, and our own way of systems within the whole country.” Lam was responding to a reporter’s question about remarks made by Zhang Xiaoming, the deputy director of the Hong Kong…

Voting Delays, Long Lines Hamper Georgia Primaries

ATLANTA—Voters waited as long as five hours to cast ballots in some Georgia precincts on June 9 amid reports of voting machine malfunctions and high turnout in a state that President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden are expected to hotly contest in the fall.

Widespread problems included trouble with Georgia’s new voting system that combines touchscreens with scanned paper ballots in races for president, U.S. Senate, and dozens of other contests.

Americans were also voting Tuesday in primaries in West Virginia, Nevada, and South Carolina following months of social restrictions to guard against the spread of COVID-19 and a week of massive protests following the death of George Floyd in police custody.

Even before Georgia voters ran into problems Tuesday, the state’s chief elections officer, Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, warned that results may be slow to come in as poll closures and virus restrictions complicate in-person voting and counties process a huge increase in ballots received by mail.

Outside a recreation center being used as a polling site in Atlanta, some voters said they had been waiting for nearly four hours in a line that wrapped around the block. At another site off Atlanta’s Piedmont Park, several people walked up, looked at the line wrapped around the parking lot and then left, shaking their heads in frustration.

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said voters in line at one of Atlanta’s largest precincts reported all the machines were down. She encouraged voters not to give up.

“If you are in line, PLEASE do not allow your vote to be suppressed,” the mayor wrote on Twitter.

The problems weren’t just limited to the Atlanta area. In Savannah, Mayor Van Johnson said he was “inundated” with phone calls Tuesday morning from voters reporting “extensive delays.” Election officials in surrounding Chatham County were requesting an extension of voting hours.

Voting Delays, Long Lines Hamper Georgia Primaries People wait in line to vote in the Georgia’s primary election at Park Tavern, in Atlanta, Ga., on June 9, 2020. (Brynn Anderson/ AP Photo)

Gabriel Sterling, who managed the rollout of Georgia’s new $120 million voting system, said he had heard of no “actual equipment issues” but rather of delayed deliveries of voting equipment and problems with polls workers “not understanding setup or how to operate voting equipment.”

Sterling blamed “counties engaging in poor planning, limited training, and failures of leadership.”

Raffensperger announced plans to investigate voting problems that plagued Fulton and Dekalb counties.

By Steve Peoples, Ben Nadler, And Sudhin Thanawala

Epoch Times staff contributed to this report

Focus News: Voting Delays, Long Lines Hamper Georgia Primaries

Second Major Australian Union Stands Against Beijing, Tells Victorian Premier ‘History Will Judge All of Us’

A leading member of Australia’s second-largest worker’s union has pleaded with the Victorian state premier to withdraw from its Belt and Road agreement with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), saying “history will judge all of us” if it remains tied to Beijing. Michael Donovan, head of the Victorian branch of the Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association (SDA) wrote a letter to Daniel Andrews, the state premier saying, “We reject the notion that somehow the Chinese people need and want an authoritarian government because they are too immature to govern themselves, and are not deserving the same rights we have.” The letter, obtained by The Herald Sun on May 31, alluded to the SDA’s connection with Solidarity in Poland, a worker’s union which played a major role in the country’s…