πŸ—³οΈ QR Code News Β· Georgia Β· April 2026

Georgia's QR Code Ballot Ban Is About to Upend the 2026 Elections

On July 1, 2026, QR codes on Georgia ballots become illegal β€” but no replacement system exists. How this tiny square barcode became the epicenter of a major electoral and constitutional crisis in America's most-watched swing state.

πŸ“ By the DoItQR team πŸ“… April 10, 2026 ⏱ 12 min read

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1. The Situation as of April 10, 2026: A State on Collision Course with Its Own Law

Georgia, the premier swing state in American politics, is facing an electoral crisis unlike any before it. In 2024, its legislators banned QR codes from ballots effective July 1, 2026. The problem: they never funded or defined a replacement system β€” and the 2026 legislative session ended April 3 without one.

The state is now facing what Republican Rep. Victor Anderson calls an "irreconcilable statutory conflict": a law banning the current ballots after July 1, and a separate obligation requiring counties to use the same Dominion machines that produce those ballots.

82 days until the July 1, 2026 deadline
8M registered Georgia voters affected
$107M cost of the Dominion system purchased in 2019
$300M estimated cost of a full system replacement
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A state heading for self-imposed chaos Since April 3, 2026, Georgia has been hurtling toward July 1 without a plan B. The May 19 primary and June 16 runoff will still use QR-coded ballots β€” legally. But after July 1, Governor Kemp must act or let courts decide the outcome.
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2. How Does the QR Code Work on a Georgia Ballot?

To understand the crisis, you need to understand the technology. Every Georgia polling place is equipped with ballot-marking devices (BMDs) made by Dominion Voting Systems β€” purchased for $107 million in 2019.

  1. The voter approaches the Dominion touchscreen machine and enters their selections on the screen, much like using a smartphone.
  2. The machine prints a paper ballot displaying two things side by side: human-readable text (the names of chosen candidates) and a machine-generated QR code.
  3. The voter submits this ballot to an optical scanner that reads only the QR code to officially tally the votes.
  4. The printed text is used for audits: audit teams compare the QR tally with the printed text to verify consistency.

The core problem: voters cannot read a QR code. They see their candidates' names printed clearly in text, but the barcode β€” invisible to the human eye β€” determines the official result. If that code is tampered with, the voter has no visual way to detect it.

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The verifiability paradox Alex Halderman, a cybersecurity professor at the University of Michigan, demonstrated in a lab setting that it is technically possible to alter only the QR code on a printed ballot while leaving the human-readable text identical to what the voter saw on screen. The voter would see the correct choices on paper, but their vote could be counted differently. This is the central argument that drove the 2024 ban.

3. Timeline: From 2019 to the 2026 Crisis

This crisis didn't build in weeks. It's the product of six years of political tensions, conspiracy theories, and court battles over Georgia's voting system.

βœ… 2019
Georgia purchases the Dominion system for $107 million
Georgia replaces its fully electronic (paperless) voting system β€” barred by a federal judge over security concerns β€” with Dominion's paper-backed BMD system, presented as the secure solution.
βœ… November 2020
Presidential election β€” Trump loses Georgia by 11,779 votes
Trump contests the results and specifically targets Dominion machines. Despite three recounts and no proven fraud, distrust becomes entrenched in Georgia's Republican base.
βœ… 2023–2024
Federal lawsuit over Dominion machine security
Election security advocates sue the state. Halderman presents research identifying 9 vulnerabilities in the Dominion QR code system. Judge Totenberg dismisses the case in April 2025 after the legislature acts.
βœ… 2024 β€” SB 189
Legislature votes to ban QR codes on ballots by July 1, 2026
Under pressure from conservative activists, lawmakers pass Senate Bill 189 banning QR codes for vote tabulation from July 1, 2026. No budget or replacement system is defined in the bill.
βœ… April 3, 2026 β€” Sine Die
The 2026 legislative session ends without a fix
The House passes SB 214 (132-39) to push the deadline to 2028. The Senate, under Lt. Gov. Burt Jones, never brings it to a vote. The session ends at 1 a.m. without agreement.
πŸ”΄ May 19, 2026
Republican and Democratic primaries
Voters will still use QR-coded ballots. This is the last legally covered election before the deadline.
πŸ”΄ July 1, 2026
DEADLINE β€” QR codes become illegal
Without a special session or court ruling before this date, the state is in violation of its own law. Lawsuits from outside groups become likely on this day.
⚠️ November 3, 2026
Midterm elections β€” system unknown
Ossoff's Senate seat, the governor's race, and numerous congressional seats are at stake. Under what voting system? As of April 10, 2026, no one knows.

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4. The Arguments on Each Side

This crisis exposes deep fractures over election security, institutional trust, and technology. Positions are far from uniform, even within parties.

πŸ”΄ Proponents of an immediate ban

  • Core argument: voters cannot read a QR code, so they cannot personally verify their vote is correctly encoded β€” a violation of the fundamental principle of voter verifiability
  • Cybersecurity: Alex Halderman identified 9 vulnerabilities in Dominion machines, including the ability to alter QR codes without changing the visible text
  • ACLU Georgia position: "The General Assembly created this problem by passing SB 189 in 2024, and it's their responsibility to find the solution" β€” Rachel Glover
  • Conservative argument: MAGA activists insist Dominion machines are inherently untrustworthy since 2020 and demand an immediate return to hand-marked paper ballots

πŸ”΅ Supporters of a temporary extension (SB 214)

  • Logistics argument: changing a voting system for 8 million voters in a matter of months is "practically impossible" according to election directors across all 159 counties
  • Cost: modifying the Dominion machines would cost tens of millions; replacing them entirely, up to $300 million β€” with no budget allocated
  • Election integrity: changing voting rules mid-cycle risks voter confusion and polling place disruptions during a high-stakes election year
  • Bipartisan support: the House voted 132-39 for the 2028 extension β€” an unusual level of Republican-Democratic agreement
  • OCR as a solution: Secretary of State Raffensperger proposed using Optical Character Recognition technology to read printed text instead of QR codes for official tallying β€” for only $300,000
Changing things in the middle of the process like that, yes, it's going to create complications, it's going to cause problems. β€” Cynthia Benford, poll manager, Chatham County (WTOC, April 2026)
By not acting, we've actually chosen chaos. β€” Sen. Kim Jackson (D – Stone Mountain), in the early hours of April 3, 2026

5. The 4 Possible Scenarios Before July 1

As of April 10, 2026, the situation remains entirely open. Here are the four outcomes that legal experts, political scientists, and election officials are discussing.

ScenarioTriggerImpact on November electionsLikelihood
πŸ›οΈ Special sessionKemp calls lawmakers backSB 214 passes, status quo through 2028Probable
βš–οΈ Lawsuit / judgeOutside groups sue on July 1Uncertain β€” a judge sets the rulesPossible
πŸ“ Hand-marked paper ballotsNo legislative or judicial actionEmergency chaotic transitionUnlikely but legal
πŸ”¬ OCR (Raffensperger)Emergency legislative authorization$300K cost β€” smooth transitionPossible in special session
βš–οΈ
The key role of Governor Kemp Only Governor Brian Kemp has the constitutional authority to call a special session. His office indicated on April 6 that it was "beginning to review the consequences of bills that did not pass." Kemp leaves office in January 2027 and is running for the US Senate β€” his decision will be as political as it is constitutional.

6. What This Means Concretely for Georgia Voters

πŸ—“οΈ Immediate calendar for voters

  • May 19, 2026 primary: QR-coded ballots will be used as normal β€” no change for voters
  • June 16 runoff: same system β€” QR codes legal through June 30
  • After July 1, 2026: the current system becomes illegal β€” but no replacement is ready
  • November 3, 2026 midterms: voting system still undetermined β€” Ossoff's Senate seat, governor's race, and multiple congressional seats at stake

😰 The logistical nightmare for election directors

Brook Schreiner, elections director of Chatham County (Savannah), put the problem bluntly: a successful election requires six months of advance planning. With 90 different ballot "styles" in Cherokee County alone, transitioning to pre-printed paper ballots would be a colossal undertaking β€” not to mention training thousands of poll workers, many of them volunteers in their mid-70s.

Deidre Holden, Paulding County's election director, went further: some of her experienced poll workers are considering quitting over the uncertainty and fear of prosecution by a State Election Board that has become increasingly aggressive since 2020.

To run a successful election, you plan six months out β€” and we're already starting in November. The QR code deadline just doesn't give us enough time. β€” Brook Schreiner, Elections Director, Chatham County (WTOC, April 2026)

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7. What This Crisis Reveals About Trust in QR Codes

The Georgia case is fascinating for anyone interested in QR codes beyond marketing: it exposes a fundamental tension between technical efficiency and human verifiability.

πŸ” The "black box" problem

A QR code is, by nature, opaque to the human eye. Unlike printed text that anyone can read, verify, and compare, a QR code requires a device to decode. In an electoral context, this opacity becomes a vector of distrust β€” whether founded on actual evidence or not.

Think about it this way: if you receive a business card with a QR code, you trust the context (the person handing it to you). If a government machine prints a QR code that determines your vote, and you cannot verify its content, the trust question takes on an entirely different dimension.

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The proposed solution: read the text, not the code Secretary of State Raffensperger proved that OCR (Optical Character Recognition) technology can read the human text printed on the ballot with 100% accuracy in a pilot test. This approach eliminates the QR code from the official count while keeping the existing machines β€” for just $300,000, versus up to $300 million for a full replacement.

πŸ›‘οΈ How to verify any QR code outside the electoral context

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8. National Stakes: Why Georgia Is at the Center of Everything

Georgia is not just any state. It's the swing state where Trump lost by 11,779 votes in 2020 β€” where results were recounted three times, where the former president tried to pressure the Secretary of State on a phone call. It's also a state where electoral trust has never fully recovered.

The November 2026 midterms are particularly high-stakes there: Jon Ossoff's Senate seat is a top Republican target for reclaiming the chamber, and the governor's race (Kemp is term-limited) is drawing major candidates from both parties. All of this unfolds against a backdrop of still-fragile confidence in the electoral system.

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The risk of "useful chaos" Marilyn Marks, a hand-marked paper ballot advocate, raises a troubling point: if QR codes remain in place past July 1 and a judge intervenes, Trump could use this technical illegality to challenge the validity of Georgia's November election results β€” with no evidence of actual fraud required. The legality of the system itself would become a political weapon.

9. Frequently Asked Questions

πŸ”Ή Are the May 19 elections affected?

No. The May 19 primaries and the June 16 runoff will use the current QR-coded ballots as normal. These elections are legally covered under existing law through June 30, 2026.

πŸ”Ή What exactly is SB 214?

Senate Bill 214 was a bipartisan bill that would have pushed the July 1, 2026 deadline to 2028, and directed the state to procure a new QR-free voting system before the 2028 presidential election. The House passed it 132-39 on April 3, but the Senate never put it to a vote.

πŸ”Ή What is a special session?

A special session is an extraordinary convening of the Georgia General Assembly outside the regular legislative calendar. Only Governor Kemp has the constitutional authority to call one. Its agenda is limited to subjects specified in his proclamation. It would allow lawmakers to pass SB 214 or an equivalent measure before July 1.

πŸ”Ή What is OCR and why does Raffensperger support it?

OCR (Optical Character Recognition) technology reads printed text and converts it into digital data. Raffensperger proposes using it to read the human-readable text on ballots (candidate names) instead of the QR code for official tabulation. A pilot program produced 100% accurate results β€” and would cost only $300,000.

πŸ”Ή Were Georgia's Dominion machines actually hacked?

No actual fraud has been proven in Georgia's 2020 or 2024 elections. However, cybersecurity researchers demonstrated in controlled laboratory conditions that theoretical vulnerabilities exist. Dominion and Georgia authorities dispute their relevance in real-world conditions, citing the multiple physical and procedural safeguards in place at polling locations.

10. Conclusion: When a QR Code Becomes a Symbol of Democratic Fracture

What's unfolding in Georgia in spring 2026 goes far beyond technology. A tiny square barcode β€” the same one you scan to view a restaurant menu β€” has become the symbol of distrust in electoral institutions, political polarization, and the difficulty of reforming complex systems in the middle of a permanent campaign cycle.

The underlying question isn't really "are QR codes safe for voting?" β€” experts broadly agree that with proper procedures, they are. The question is: how do you build trust in a tool that no one can verify with the naked eye?

Georgia's answer, at least for now, seems to be: you can't. And that answer is about to force an entire state to reinvent its electoral system in a matter of weeks.

πŸ” Verify Your QR Codes β€” Always

Whatever the context, QR code transparency starts with knowing where it points. Use DoItQR to create, scan, and verify.

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πŸ“š Sources & References

  1. Atlanta News First / WCTV β€” State nears deadline to stop counting ballots with QR codes β€” wctv.tv Β· April 6, 2026
  2. NBC News β€” Georgia lawmakers end session without resolving voting system dispute β€” nbcnews.com Β· April 3, 2026
  3. Georgia Recorder β€” Elections bill capsizes on final day of Georgia's 2026 session β€” georgiarecorder.com Β· April 3, 2026
  4. Daily Tribune β€” Failure of elections bill may mean quick switch to hand-marked ballots β€” daily-tribune.com Β· April 8, 2026
  5. Tifton Gazette β€” QR codes will soon be illegal for tallying election results in Georgia β€” tiftongazette.com Β· April 9, 2026
  6. Georgia Public Broadcasting β€” Could the Legislature be back for a second session this year? β€” gpb.org Β· April 6, 2026
  7. Axios Atlanta β€” Kemp faces pressure to call special session over Georgia ballot law β€” axios.com Β· April 9, 2026
  8. WRDW/WAGT β€” Ga. lawmakers end session without fix for looming ballot counting deadline β€” walb.com Β· April 6, 2026
  9. PBS NewsHour β€” Georgia lawmakers fail to settle voting machines conflict β€” pbs.org
  10. Atlanta Civic Circle β€” Sine Die: What Happened in the Georgia Legislature β€” atlantaciviccircle.org Β· April 3, 2026
  11. WTOC Savannah β€” Georgia election officials concerned about QR ballot ban deadline Β· April 10, 2026