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Georgia’s QR codes for counting votes likely to remain for midterms as lawmakers delay action

ATLANTA (AP) — A day after postponing plans to , state lawmakers were poised Thursday to delay making any changes to the state’s .

That would mean the system, which relies on a QR code to tally the votes, will remain in place for the November election, an outcome some voting rights advocates preferred to avoid creating confusion at polling sites.

Georgia’s governor, Republican Brian Kemp, had placed redistricting and the state’s election system on the agenda for a special legislative session. On Wednesday — the first day of the session — lawmakers rejected his call for redistricting for the 2028 election, citing concerns about moving too quickly after a weakened federal for minority voters.

On Thursday, they advanced legislation that would postpone a looming deadline to change the election system used throughout the political battleground state.

That system relies on a QR code printed on ballots to tally the votes. It has drawn the ire of President Donald Trump, who claimed that voting machines in Georgia deleted or switched votes in the 2020 election. Trump to Democrat Joe Biden that year.

Legislators barring the use of the QR code for the official vote count beyond July 1 of this year, but of tabulating votes was ever implemented. Lawmakers were expected to try to come up with a new system during the special session but instead appear set to punt the issue until later.

A bill advanced Thursday by state senators would extend the July 1 deadline to Jan. 1, 2028. It also would create a committee to recommend “specifications, standards, and requirements” for a new voting system.

“We feel that this gets us into a position to clarify and provide certainty to our election officials and to our electorate,” Republican state Sen. Max Burns, who co-authored the legislation, told lawmakers.

County election officials have received conflicting advice about how to count votes in case the legislature fails to extend the deadline or implement a new voting system.

Burns said the governor’s office and leaders in the state House had agreed to the Senate proposal, which passed out of two committees Thursday. The full Senate is scheduled to consider it on Saturday.

Georgia voting machines have been the subject of , which manufacturer Dominion Voting Systems fought vigorously in court. But election integrity advocates also have about the machines, arguing that they are and that voters cannot be sure their selections are accurately reflected because people can’t read QR codes.

Trump , which also are used in at least some counties in more than a dozen states, in his shortly after he took office for his second term in January 2025. That order has been blocked by multiple courts and is not being enforced.

Under the new legislation, the committee tasked with recommending a new voting system would have until Jan. 31, 2027, to report its findings. State lawmakers would be responsible for funding, buying and implementing it for the 2028 election cycle.

The committee would be made up of three people appointed by the governor, three members of the Senate and three members of the House.

Copyright © 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

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