• Categories

  • Post Archives

    • > Follow us on Twitter
    • Latest Posts

    • Meta

    Posts Tagged
    ‘ohio’



    100.3% of Ohioans Have Photo ID

    Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

    With the passage of so many new photo ID laws, it would be nice if states could get a handle on just how many citizens don’t have the kind of ID they will need in order to vote.

    Numerous estimates suggest that at least 1 in 10 citizens don’t have the right type of identification and would not be eligible to vote. Among certain populations, the lack of ID is undoubtedly higher, including, for example, in Wisconsin where a comprehensive study found that 78% of African-American males age 18 to 24 and 66% of African-American women age 18 to 24 don’t have government photo ID. (Despite those numbers, representatives of the Department of Transportation in Wisconsin insist that 97% of currently registered voters has a photo ID.)

    Along comes Ohio. The Columbus Dispatch analyzed the DMV and U.S. Census data in Ohio and found that some counties in the state have issued more IDs than they have voting-age people. According to this analysis, the percentage of voting-age residents having photo ID ranges from 71.9% in Athens County to 107.9% in Lawrence County. The average across the state is 100.3%. The paper concluded: “. . . records from the state Bureau of Motor Vehicles show about 8.83 million voting-age residents have an Ohio driver’s license or photo ID – about 28,000 more than there are voting-age residents in the state, according to the 2010 census.”

    Stating the obvious, Professor Dan Tokaji at the Ohio State University’s Moritz College of Law said: “It’s just not possible that every citizen in Ohio has a driver’s license. We may not know exactly how many don’t, but we know that it’s not the case.” It is possible that the census population estimates are too low or that people have been issued multiple licenses (one for cars, one for motorcycles) or people who move out of state haven’t been purged from the list or the census counts students at school who may have an ID issued in another county or state. What seems negligent is making policy decisions based on confusing and inaccurate information.

    Those who say it isn’t a burden to the right kind of ID may be speaking for 107% of the population, but what about the rest of us?

    Becca Ward
    Bio: Duke University, Class of 2012 Majoring in Public Policy, Certificate in Energy and the Environment From Portland, Oregon.  Aquarius
    @BeccawkWard
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Ohio’s Election “Reform”

    Friday, July 15th, 2011

    For a brief and glorious moment, Ohio was going to have online voter registration. A mere 12 days after online voter registration was born, the Ohio legislature passed HB 224, a bill that amended parts of an election reform bill (HB 194) that gave online voter registration its short life. We’ll get to that in a minute.

    First, let’s just say that the original election reform bill – HB 194 – was not entirely beneficial to voters. It shortens the early voting period from 35 days to 17 days, ends all Sunday voting hours, and stops counties from automatically sending out absentee ballot applications (a common practice in larger, urban counties). It also eliminates a requirement for poll workers to direct voters to their correct precinct if they arrive at the wrong location. That’s right: if you show up at the wrong polling place, poll workers now don’t have to tell you where your proper polling place is.

    Before this “reform,” poll workers were required to inform and direct voters to their correct polling place. In a place like the Ohio Union on the campus of Ohio State University where voters from many precincts cast their ballots in different parts of the building, poll workers could tell a wayward voter, “actually, your polling place is across the hall.” This is known as the “right church, wrong pew” issue.

    Why does your “pew” matter? Because voters who aren’t on the rolls at a polling place are given provisional ballots, and provisional ballots cast in the wrong precinct are not counted. Instead of fixing the problem – say, allowing votes cast by properly registered voters who were in the wrong spot to count for races that aren’t precinct-specific, like for President or Governor – the new law will make it worse by allowing poll workers to ignore lost voters.

    Ohio Representative Alicia Reece noted: “Some of my constituents cast their ballot at the right polling location but in the wrong precinct due to the error of a poll worker. They showed up to the right building, but they were misdirected. Others showed up to the wrong place and were not told to go to the correct building which might have been just a mile down the road.”

    Also lurking surreptitiously in the “Miscellaneous” section of the reform bill explicitly prohibits any public school from transporting students to a polling place during regular school hours to vote. Why, you ask? Our friends at the Fair Elections Legal Network pick up the story:

    A social studies teacher from Hughes High School in Cincinnati allowed students to be transported to the polls without authorized supervision, a violation of district field trip policy. The incident was met with outrage by some Republicans after it was learned that the students were shown only Democratic sample ballots, which prompted allegations that the Cincinnati school district was in conspiracy with Democrats to “indoctrinate young people for their electoral purposes.”

    School officials stated that students were given only Democratic literature because a Republican campaign worker declined to provide literature. The district maintained that they were not interested in partisan politics. While school officials at Hughes High School did in fact violate field trip policy, to charge that it exposed efforts by the Cincinnati school district to pressure young voters is a willful distortion of the matters of the case. The district swiftly took several corrective measures following the incident; disciplinary action was taken against the school officials in question and a court order signed by a county judge barred the district from using any personnel or property of the public school system to advocate for a particular candidate or party.

    Despite the court order, former House of Representatives member Thomas Brinkman pressed forward on a lawsuit to issue a permanent injunction against students being subjected to partisan activities during school hours. Less than a year later, Brinkman’s position against students being transported to the polls would be echoed by Ohio legislators in HB 194.

    On the plus side, HB 194 did allow online voter registration for voters with driver’s licenses or state ID cards. This forward-looking reform, pushed for by the Secretary of State, would have allowed new voters to register completely online and currently registered voters to update their information when they moved or changed their name. Not anymore. The bill that was passed this week, HB 224, stripped out the online voter registration provisions.

    So, instead of fixing provisions in the original bill that would be barriers to access and participation, the legislature removed the measures that would actually help facilitate and modernize the voting process. Secretary of State Jon Husted was disappointed: “The goal of online registration was to take advantage of technology and allow voters to register and update their addresses so they don’t have to vote provisionally. We were trying to make Ohio a more forward-thinking state. This action is a setback for Ohio, but it will not stop my efforts to modernize our election system.”

    Ever the optimist, Secretary of State Husted said: “Today should be viewed as a victory for what didn’t happen. The Senate did not enact a draconian photo identification law and I thank them for hearing my concerns.”

    Ah, victory never tasted so bad.

    Becca Ward
    Bio: Duke University, Class of 2012 Majoring in Public Policy, Certificate in Energy and the Environment From Portland, Oregon.  Aquarius
    @BeccawkWard
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Hold On Ohio, Rhode Island’s Voter ID Bill Isn’t the Same

    Friday, July 8th, 2011

    Today’s Columbus Dispatch suggests that there are efforts to revive the strict photo ID bill in Ohio in a special legislation session next week. Some Republican leaders are trying to push fellow Republican Secretary of State Jon Husted, who has been opposed to the photo ID legislation, and members of the Ohio Senate to accept the bill. Their rationale is that Rhode Island, which has a Democratic legislature and an independent Governor, passed legislation that implements new voter ID requirements at the polls. From the Dispatch article:

    “It is very encouraging that other states are moving forward on this common-sense concept that will strengthen elections and restore voters’ confidence in the democratic process,” Rep. John Adams, R-Sidney, said in a release. “I am disappointed that (Husted) has not supported this legislation despite nationwide bipartisan support from both state legislatures and the public.”

    Hold up. Let’s be clear: the newly enacted Rhode Island law is different from the Ohio proposal in many important ways.

    First, Rhode Island’s law does not go into effect until 2014. During the 2012 elections, voters will be able to use a broad range of identification at the polls, including non-photo documents such as Social Security cards, debit and credit cards, Medicare cards, or birth certificates. Ohio’s legislation would go into effect for the 2012 elections and would only allow a narrow list government-issued photo IDs at the polls.

    Second, once the photo ID requirement is fully implemented in Rhode Island in 2014, the list of acceptable photo IDs is broader than Ohio’s current proposal. Rhode Island will accept all college, Rhode Island and federally issued IDs with a photo, whereas the Ohio bill does not include college IDs.

    Third, and perhaps most importantly, the Rhode Island law has a critical fail-safe for those voters without ID. Any voter without the proper identification can cast a provisional ballot. If their signature on the provisional ballot matches the signature on their voter registration, as determined by the local board of elections, the provisional ballot will count. This fail-safe is similar to the approach several other states take, allowing voters without proper identification to sign an affidavit, under the penalty of perjury, that they are who they say they are and cast a regular ballot.

    Finally, the fact that Democrats voted for this bill in Rhode Island doesn’t magically make Ohio’s – or any other state’s – push to limit access to the polls okay. It doesn’t matter if the politicians supporting this are Republicans or Democrats. If they are making it harder for young people and other citizens to vote, then they are on the wrong side of this issue. That is what drives the work we’ve been doing. As Rock the Vote President Heather Smith said yesterday, “In a democracy, where the right to vote should absolutely be protected, we should be working to make it easier, not harder, to cast a ballot.”

    Thomas Bates
    Bio: Thomas is Rock the Vote's Vice President of Civic Engagement.
    @BatesThomas
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Weekly Voter Suppression Update: Vetoes & More

    Monday, June 27th, 2011

    The following post originally appeared at CampusProgress.org and Fair Elections Legal Network.

    The Good News

    North Carolina: Governor Bev Perdue (D) vetoed North Carolina’s strict photo ID bill last Thursday. Because several House Democrats would have to join Republicans to reach the vote necessary to overturn a veto, we’re hoping photo ID is finally off the table in North Carolina…for this year, anyway.

    Maine: As expected,Governor Paul LePage (R) signed Maine’s bill to end Election Day registration into law last Tuesday. However, we’ve put Maine in the “good news” column this week because Maine groups have launched an effort to repeal the state’s voter ID law by pursuing a citizen’s veto. The first step: collecting 57,277 signatures by August 8.

    [Editor's note: Mainers, sign up to be part of the People's Veto campaign here.]

    Florida: Concerned groups are weighing in with the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) regarding Florida’s omnibus voter suppression bill. Changes to Florida’s elections laws must receive approval from the DOJ or the D.C. federal district court, due to a history of discrimination in five of Florida’s 67 counties. Florida submitted its request for preclearance to the DOJ on June 9, and recently comment letters were submitted by Project Vote, the ACLU Voting Rights Project, and the Florida ACLU (jointly) and the NAACP, LDF, and Florida Conference of Black State Legislators (jointly). The groups ask the DOJ to deny preclearance because of the bill’s discriminatory effect on minority voters. FELN will submit a comment letter this week.

    New Hampshire: Governor John Lynch (D) has until midnight tonight to decide whether to veto a photo ID bill. The bill would require a voter who doesn’t present a government-issued photo ID at the polls to return with acceptable ID by noon on the Friday after an election in order for the vote to count. Though a veto is expected, we can’t count our chickens before they’re hatched. The legislature will likely attempt to override the veto and it remains to be seen whether the Governor has the votes in the Senate to sustain it. In its legislative bulletin on Friday, the New Hampshire Municipal Association reiterated the problematic nature of the bill and expressed its hope that a veto and the votes to sustain it are forthcoming.

    The Bad News

    Ohio: Ohio’s Senate pulled out all the stops last week. After a series of confusing committee hearings involving substitute bills and a game of green light/red light on the vehicle for photo ID, the Senate passed an omnibus voter suppression bill Thursday night and is poised to pass photo ID early this week. The omnibus bill, HB 194, is largely similar to the version passed by the House last month and, among other things, shortens the early in-person voting period from 35 to 17 days and eliminates early voting on Sundays, Saturday afternoons, and the Monday before Election Day. The bill now goes back to the House for concurrence and then on to Governor John Kasich (R) for signature. Separately, though a vote on a photo ID bill was delayed last week to address drafting concerns, it is expected to come to a vote as early as tomorrow. On Friday afternoon, Republican Secretary of State Jon Husted issued a strong public statement opposing the strict photo ID proposal, indicating that it “does little to protect against fraud and excludes legally registered voters.”  

    Pennsylvania: After weeks of delay (causing us to optimistically, if tentatively, place PA in the “good news” column while we waited), the House passed a photo ID bill on Thursday. The bill now goes to the Senate, which is expected to take it up in the fall. Stay tuned!

    Rhode Island: Will Rhode Island be the first Democratic-majority state to pass a photo ID bill? We’ll know by the end of the week, when the legislature adjourns for the year. The bill has not yet been scheduled for a House committee vote, but if we’ve learned anything this year, it’s that we shouldn’t breathe easy where voter suppression’s concerned – anything can happen at the last minute.

    Megan Donovan is a staff attorney with the Fair Elections Legal Network. Tobin is a Network Associate at Campus Progress.

    Tobin Van Ostern
    Bio: Tobin is a Network Associate with Campus Progress and appears as a guest blogger for RTV.
    @TobinVanOstern
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Ohio: Go Jon Husted!

    Friday, June 24th, 2011

    Strange things are afoot in Ohio right now, and Republican Secretary of State Jon Husted is looking like he could be the hero. The elections chief, breaking with the leadership of his party in the General Assembly, just put out a statement blasting the state legislature for trying to impose a rigid photo ID requirement for voting.

    Some background: this week, the photo ID legislation was resurrected in the state Senate and included into a broader elections reform package that the Secretary of State helped put together. Abruptly, the Senate pulled the photo ID language from the bigger reform bill and made it a stand-alone bill. That stand-alone bill is supposed to be voted on next week.

    Secretary Husted has been clear in his opposition to a strict photo ID requirement because he recognizes that it doesn’t prevent fraud and makes it harder for legally registered people to vote. He has said that he would not change the current system which allows voters to prove their identities with a photo ID, a current utility bill, bank statement, paycheck or government document with a current name and address.

    His opposition to the photo ID bill came to a boil today as the General Assembly continues to consider the elections bills. Secretary Husted made it clear that he is willing to give up the overall reform package – something he’s been working on for months – over the photo ID issue. Here is Secretary Husted’s full statement:

    “I want to be perfectly clear, when I began working with the General Assembly to improve Ohio’s elections system it was never my intent to reject valid votes. I would rather have no bill than one with a rigid photo identification provision that does little to protect against fraud and excludes legally registered voters’ ballots from counting.

    “It is in the hands of the General Assembly.”

    Strong words. And very important words in this fight. Please share them.

    Thomas Bates
    Bio: Thomas is Rock the Vote's Vice President of Civic Engagement.
    @BatesThomas
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com