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Sorry, We鈥檙e Closed: Some Ohio Counties Opt Against Extra Early Voting Hours

Mike Brickner,
老澳门开奖结果 of Ohio
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August 13, 2012

Ohio elections are once again making national news, but not exactly in the way we鈥檇 hoped. County Boards of Elections are deciding whether they will be open extended hours on evenings and weekends for early in-person voting. In 2008, many counties, including Cuyahoga and Franklin (home to Cleveland and Columbus) had large numbers of voters use these extended hours.

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In a surprising shift, many of the counties that used extended hours in 2008 have deadlocked along partisan lines in Board of Elections votes. At the same time, boards in rural and suburban areas that have not previously extended hours have added additional hours. This has led to may suffer because partisan efforts to provide greater access in Republican-leaning counties and less access in Democrat-leaning counties. Perhaps even more troubling is the , who used these times to promote programs like 鈥淪ouls to the Polls.鈥

Secretary of State Jon Husted that he may issue standardized guidelines that would set early voting hours for all counties.

Today, the agreeing that counties must have uniform rules for early voting. Early in-person voting is easy, effective, and popular with many Ohioans, and we believe it should be equally available to all.

However, we urged Secretary Husted not to begin a 鈥渞ace to the bottom鈥 by forbidding all counties from having extended early voting hours. Instead, all counties should have extended evening and weekend early in-person voting hours so all Ohioans may have increased options to cast their ballot early.

Separate lawsuits that may restore in-person early voting the weekend before Election Day. These hours were eliminated through voter suppression legislation passed earlier in 2012.

Since Ohio allowed voters to cast early in-person ballots for any reason, early voting has become increasingly popular, especially among African Americans. As a result, the long lines and confusion that marred the 2000 and 2004 elections have largely disappeared in Ohio. If the state rolls back access to in-person early voting, it could bring a resurgence of Election Day problems and disenfranchise countless more Ohioans.

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