Stacey Abrams was challenged to say what is wrong with Georgia's new voting law and her response went viral

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Stacey Abrams was challenged to say what is wrong with Georgia's new voting law and her response went viral
Democratic politician Stacey Abrams speaks to the media before the Democratic Presidential Debate at Tyler Perry Studios November 20, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia.Joe Raedle/Getty Images
  • A video clip of activist Stacey Abrams went viral after she responded to a GOP senator who asked her to list her objections to Georgia's controversial new election law.
  • Republican Sen. John Kennedy on Tuesday challenged Abrams to list her objections to the law.
  • Abrams provided a long list that eventually resulted in Sen. Kennedy interrupting to stop her.
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A video clip of activist Stacey Abrams went viral on Wednesday after she was challenged by a GOP senator to list her objections to Georgia's controversial new election law.

Republican Sen. John Kennedy on Tuesday asked Abrams, the founder of voting rights group Fair Fight, to list her objections to Georgia's restrictive new voting law, which she said contained racist provisions.

Abrams, who was credited with helping President Joe Biden win Georgia and who previously served as a Democratic lawmaker in the Georgia House of Representatives, responded with a long list of her objections to the law that eventually resulted in Sen. Kennedy interrupting to stop her.

"Tell me specifically, just give me a list of the provisions that you object to," said Sen. John Kennedy during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on voting rights on Tuesday.

Abrams replied: "I object to the provisions that remove access to the right to vote, that shorten the run-off period from nine weeks to four weeks, that restrict the time that a voter can request to return an absentee ballot..."

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Sen. Kennedy then interrupted Abrams and asked her to "start over."

She then proceeded to detail a long list of objections to the bill. As Abrams continued to describe those objections, Sen. Kennedy asked her a total of three times: "What else?"

Eventually, as Abrams continued to detail problems with the bill, he asked: "Is that everything?"

Abrams replied: "No it is not, no sir," and continued to list objections to the bill until Sen. Kennedy finally interrupted her and said: "OK, I get the idea."

The clip of the interaction was tweeted by the Senate Democrats account on Twitter and shared over 20,000 times.

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Campaign groups, civil-rights advocates, and progressive lawmakers have been highly critical of the law, which they say would suppress voters, and particularly Black voters. The sweeping new law bans people from offering food or water to people waiting to vote and introduces stricter voter-ID rules for absentee ballots among other provisions.

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