Ohio
Secretary Jon Husted
Husted
to appeal Federal Court
decision to U.S. Supreme Court
Pledges that whatever the outcome,
voting hours will be uniform statewide
COLUMBUS
– Secretary of State Jon
Husted today announced that he will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to make
the
final determination on whether the General Assembly of the State of
Ohio or the
federal courts should set Ohio election laws. Husted will be appealing
the
Friday decision by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in Obama v.
Husted.
Regarding this decision, all of the following may be attributed to
Secretary
Husted:
“This
is an unprecedented intrusion
by the federal courts into how states run elections and because of its
impact
on all 50 states as to who and how elections will be run in America we
are
asking the Supreme Court to step in and allow Ohioans to run Ohio
elections.
“This
ruling not only doesn’t make
legal sense, it doesn’t make practical sense. The court is saying that
all
voters must be treated the same way under Ohio law, but also grants
Ohio’s 88
elections boards the authority to establish 88 different sets of rules.
That
means that one county may close down voting for the final weekend while
a
neighboring county may remain open. How any court could consider this a
remedy
to an equal protection problem is stunning.
“As
a swing state, we in Ohio
expect to be held to a high standard and level of scrutiny when it
comes to
elections. However, it’s troubling that the federal courts have failed
to
recognize that there isn’t another state in the union which can claim
Ohio’s
broad menu of voting options and opportunity to vote. In Ohio, ALL
voters
already have at least 230 hours available to vote in person prior to
Election
Day, ALL registered voters received an application to vote by mail and
ALL
voters still have the ability to vote during the 13-hour window on
Election Day
itself.
“While
I will be asking the U.S.
Supreme Court to uphold Ohio law through the appeals process, the last
thing I
want to see is a non-uniform system where voters will be treated
differently in
all 88 counties.
“Since
some boards of elections
have already started to take action on hours of operation for the three
days
before Election Day, I am going to take time to consult with all 88
counties
before crafting a directive to set uniform hours should the state not
be
successful upon appeal.”
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