Toledo
Blade...
Obama
campaign sues Husted over early voting issue
By Jim
Provance
Blade
Columbus Bureau Chief
Statement
from Chairman Bennett follows this article.
COLUMBUS —
President Obama’s campaign sued Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted
today to
keep him from enforcing a law closing the doors to in-person early
voting
during the three days immediately preceding the Nov. 6 election.
Lawmakers
recently undid a far-reaching, Republican-backed election reform law
when faced
with a Democratic-led effort to repeal it at the polls, but they did
not repeal
a separate subsequently passed law that duplicated one provision of the
repealed law.
That
provision prohibits county board of elections from keeping their doors
open on
the weekend and Monday before the election to accommodate early voters,
a
three-day period that has been heavily used in past elections.
The
campaign joined the Democratic National Committee and the Ohio
Democratic Party
in filing the lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Columbus.
The
Republican secretary of state did enforce the three-day early vote
prohibition
for the March primary election.
Ohio voters
can still begin casting absentee ballots by mail and voting in person
at
election board-approved locations 35 days out from the election. An
attempt to
narrow this window was shelved when the broader election reform law was
repealed before it could take effect.
“It’s a
cynical ploy that is both unfair and unjust,” said Patrick Gaspard, DNC
executive director. “The last three days of early vote… are the busiest
voting
days, ensuring Ohioans don’t have to choose between work and family and
voting.’’
The lawsuit
contends that the provision violates the equal protection rights of
voters,
since the deadline for uniformed military personnel, their spouses, and
their
voting-age dependents are permitted to vote early through the Monday
before the
election.
ODP
Chairman Chris Redfern noted that 30 percent of all votes cast in the
2008
presidential election were cast early and 93,000 of those were cast in
the
final three days before the election.
Read this
and other articles at the Toledo Blade
Chairman
Bennett’s Statement on OFA Lawsuit
COLUMBUS -
Chairman Bob Bennett issued the following statement in response to the
lawsuit
against Ohio’s laws pertaining to in-person voting three days before
Election
Day:
“Democrats’
outcry now is a just another circus sideshow. The provision being
attacked
comes from HB 224 which was passed with Democratic support; it’s
confusing for
Democrats to be suing over this when they supported it in the first
place.
“Nobody is being disenfranchised here, as
Ohio’s voters who choose to vote early can do so by mail 24 hours a
day, seven
days a week or at early voting polls. Furthermore, for the first time
ever in
Ohio’s history, the Secretary of State has gone to great lengths to
accommodate
everyone’s right to vote by sending every registered voter in Ohio an
absentee
request form.”
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