Election 2012: The GOP Stealing Ohio
From "
The Nation:"
...In response to the 2008 election results, Ohio Republicans drastically curtailed the early voting
period in 2012 from 35 to 11 days, with no voting on the Sunday before
the election, when African-American churches historically rally their
congregants to go to the polls. (Ohio was one of five states to cut back
on early voting since 2010.) Voting rights activists subsequently
gathered enough signatures to block the new voting restrictions and
force a referendum on Election Day. In reaction, Ohio Republicans
repealed their own bill in the state legislature, but kept a ban on
early voting three days before Election Day (a period when 93,000
Ohioans voted in 2008), adding an exception for active duty members of
the military, who tend to lean Republican. (The Obama campaign is now challenging the law in court, seeking to expand early voting for all Ohioans)...
...Now, in heavily Democratic cities like Cleveland, Columbus, Akron and
Toledo, early voting hours will be limited to 8 am until 5 pm on
weekdays beginning on October 1, with no voting at night or during the
weekend, when it’s most convenient for working people to vote.
Republican election commissioners have blocked Democratic efforts to
expand early voting hours in these counties, where the board of
elections are split equally between Democratic and Republican members.
Ohio Republican Secretary of State Jon Husted has broken the tie by
intervening on behalf of his fellow Republicans.
‘‘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. Noted the Cincinnati Enquirer:
“The counties where Husted has joined other Republicans to deny
expanded early voting strongly backed then-candidate Barack Obama in
2008, while most of those where the extra hours will stand heavily
supported GOP nominee John McCain.” Moreover, budget constraints have
not stopped Republican legislators from passing costly voter ID laws across the map since 2010. ...
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