Ohio has introduced a new tactic in their broader attempts to make it
even harder for Democratic voters to get to the polls this year. Early
voting stations in Ohio’s heavily Democratic counties will only be open
between 8 am and 5 pm, while Republican counties have expanded their
hours to allow voting on nights and weekends.
This rule is the latest in a broader attack on voting rights in Ohio,
which often comes down to a tiny margin of votes. Ohio Republicans are
currently ensconced in a legal battle
with the Obama campaign over another new rule that would limit early
voting in the three day period before the election exclusively to
military families. Mitt Romney falsely claims
Obama’s lawsuit is meant to take away voting rights from military
families, when in fact he is simply trying to restore voting rights to
all Ohio residents. Early voting was introduced to mitigate Ohio’s notoriously chaotic elections, in which thousands of votes are tossed due to clerical errors and bureaucratic confusion.
Starting October 1st, voters in Democrat-leaning urban centers
including Cleveland, Columbus, Akron and Toledo will now only be allowed
to vote between 8 am and 5 pm on weekdays, when the majority of people
are at work. The board of elections in these counties, which are split
evenly between Democrats and Republicans, was gridlocked over a
Democratic effort to expand hours. The Republican Secretary of State Jon
Husted stepped in to deny expanded hours in these counties. But
Republican-heavy counties have actually expanded early voting hours on
nights and weekends, when most people have time to go to the polls. The Nation reports:
According to the Board of Elections, 82% of early voters in Franklin County voted early on nights or weekends, which Republicans have curtailed. The number who voted on nights or weekends was nearly 50% in Cuyahoga County.
“I cannot create unequal access from one county board to another, and I must also keep in mind resources available to each county,” Husted said in explaining his decision to deny expanded early voting hours in heavily Democratic counties. Yet in solidly Republican counties like Warren and Butler, GOP election commissioners have approved expanded early voting hours on nights and weekends.
Besides historically favoring Democrats, these urban centers comprise
Ohio’s most populous and diverse counties. 28 percent of Cuyahoga
County is African American, as is 20 percent of Franklin County.
President Obama won the African American vote by 95 points in Ohio.
Voters in these cities already have to surmount many challenges to get their votes counted. A recent study
by the Cincinnati Enquirer found urban counties are particularly
vulnerable to the clerical errors that lead to thousands of discarded
ballots. An investigation into Ohio’s chaotic 2004 election by the
Government Accounting Office confirmed
Democratic districts’ complaints of a shortage of voting machines,
along with malfunctioning equipment that incorrectly registered the
voter’s choice. George W. Bush narrowly won the state, putting him over
the top for a second term.
No comments:
Post a Comment