G.A. consent-alternative election process during health emergency

Number H. B. No. 680
Type House Bill
General Assembly 133
Government Link

Sponsors

Policy doesn’t happen in a vacuum. Meet the representatives and senators who introduced this bill and are pushing it through the chamber. Click on any sponsor to see their district, party affiliation, and what other legislation they’ve championed this session.

Primary Sponsors

Cindy Abrams
District 29
Party Republican
Chamber House of Representatives

Co-Sponsors

Related Topics

To make your research more efficient, this bill has been assigned to one or more Topics. These custom labels group related legislation together, ensuring you can find all of the bills related to a specific topic, regardless of which committee they are in.

Elections & Voting Taxation & Finance Criminal Justice Healthcare Transportation Civil Rights & Liberties Local Government Military & Veterans Affairs Technology & Cybersecurity

Most legislative decisions are made in committee rooms, not on the chamber floor. Here, you can track which committees have been assigned to review, amend, or report on this bill. Stay informed on where the bill is currently being debated and which chairpersons hold the power to move it forward.

Status Changes

Legislation moves through a rigorous series of checkpoints. Use this tracker to see exactly which phase the bill is in—whether it’s currently under committee review, up for a floor vote, or awaiting a signature to become law. For more information about bills, please see How a Bill Becomes Law.

House Senate Governor
  1. Introduced
    May 26 2020
  2. Referred to committee
    May 27 2020
  3. Passed
    Jun 04 2020
    Vote Result
    Passed
  4. Reported - Substitute
    Jun 04 2020
    Vote Result
    Favorable Passage
  1. Introduced
    Jun 08 2020
  2. Referred to committee
    Jun 10 2020

Documents

Access the primary source. This section hosts the full, unedited text of the legislation alongside every official document produced during its journey. From the initial draft to the final enrolled version, you can review the exact language being proposed for state law.