Ohio Secretary of State Brunner Does Right By Voters

by: project vote

Mon Sep 08, 2008 at 20:08


(Great news from Ohio! - promoted by Paul Rosenberg)

For a while now we've been keeping you informed of Project Vote's efforts to prevent a repeat of massive voter caging operations that plagued Ohio in the 2004 elections. A controversial series of vague voter challenge laws, passed by the Ohio legislature in 2006, allowed any voter's eligibility to be challenged, without notice,  based on nothing more than a single piece of returned, unforwardable mail. This is the same trick the GOP used to challenge over 35,000 Ohio voters in 2004, when the outcome of the entire presidential election was riding on that state. This transparent voter suppression tactic worked in 2004, and the 2006 laws made it even easier. Project Vote has estimated that, in 2008, voter caging could result in as many as 600,000 eligible voters-mostly low-income Americans, people of color, and youths-being stricken from the Ohio voter rolls without notice or due process.  
project vote :: Ohio Secretary of State Brunner Does Right By Voters
In cooperation with another organization, Project Vote has been working on the situation for months, urging Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner to stand up for Ohioans and put a stop to these partisan practices. On Friday, Secretary Brunner showed that she had heard many of our concerns, and took steps to help protect Ohio voters. To prevent partisan voter-caging operations, Brunner issued a binding directive to all county election boards, instructing them that parts of the 2006 challenge laws were unconstitutional and stating that granting a residency challenge based only on returned mail violates the National Voter Registration Act. Brunner's directive also advises that voters must be to be given due notice of any challenge before Election Day. Failure to follow these guidelines, Brunner indicated, could result in lawsuits from disenfranchised voters.

According to an AP story, Brunner acknowledges that the 2006 voter challenge laws appeared to have sprung from partisan attempts to challenge voter registrations based on returned mail. "When you line it all up you see a very flawed process that can put many people's rights in jeopardy," Brunner says. "I'm not sure what the motivation was and who drafted it. All I know is it's not likely to stand up in court."

Teresa James, attorney for Project Vote, appreciates Brunner's efforts to protect voters  "Particularly in light of the troubling history of voter caging in Ohio," James says, "Secretary Brunner is to be commended for her work on this issue and her concern for Ohio voters. However, there is still work to be done to fully protect the voters from voter caging."  

While Brunner's directive makes it clear that residency challenges based solely on returned mail would be denied, we know all too well from history  that partisans might file frivolous challenges anyway to intimidate voters and reduce turnout of low-income and minority voters on Election Day. They've used this trick before, and we're working with our allies to make sure they don't get away with it this time. We'll keep you informed as the situation develops, but for now we recognize Secretary Brunner for taking positive steps on this vital issue.


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Thank goodness for Brunner! (4.00 / 2)
She's fighting for what's right. She dots her i's and crosses her t's. She's all for the people's voice being heard in America.

This is just one example of why 2004 isn't 2008 (4.00 / 4)
At this point last cycle, the SoS was actively trying to prevent registration overe issues like cardstock.

sometime there is good news when we need it! (0.00 / 0)
Today has been very depressing. The very idea that McInsain,  Karl rover and his rethuglicans could bamboozle so many americans is demoralizing to say the least. After all these years how could anyone vote for more of the same?  

The only reasonable conclusion is... (0.00 / 0)
there's a large group of voters who are dumb, dumb, dumb. They seem to think this is a popularity contest, instead of making the best choice with their own best interest in mind. But whinign about this, doesn't help, of course. Those votes are necessary for a win, and so the message has to be shaped accordingly in order to reach those voters. Simple points that resonate, hammered in again and again. Republicans  brought the US on the wrong track, it's time for a real change! Don't fall for phony changes that are lipstick on the pig! Being a "great buddy" isn't qualification for being president, you need the guy with the right plans to correct the course!

Simpler messages that counter the republican brouhaha, pls. Academics don't do great headlines (with all the footnotes and caveats and such). Don't let the rethuglicans gain air superiority with their breezy talking points. Keep it simpler, stupids!  


[ Parent ]
Brunner can help only because she was elected in 2006 (4.00 / 3)
It is worth noting that Jennifer Brunner was elected with the help of the Secretary of State Project in 2006, along with reform minded Democrats in four other battleground states - Minnesota, Iowa, New Mexico, and Nevada. Imagine how bad off we would be if Republicans still controlled those states. There is more to be done, of course - check out the four progressive women being supported by the Project at www.secstateproject.org - I am one of the organizers.

Are you following the situation in VA? (4.00 / 4)
A short while ago, the registrar of elections in Montgomery County, VA (which includes Virginia Tech) sent out a memo advising students that registering to vote at school could cost them their scholarships, and would require their parents to stop declaring them as dependents on their taxes.  In other words, he's telling students that it will be very damn expensive if they try to vote at school.  Of course, he's talking out of his ass, but it's causing some waves.

Check this out: http://www.insidehighered.com/...

The issue isn't just the Presidential race: control of the VA legislature is hinging on just a few seats, and whoever wins the 2009 legislative elections will have a majority when the state redistricts.  Think about how many close Congressional seats there are in Virginia.

This needs to be on all our radars, in a big way.  The student vote at UVA, VA Tech, and George Mason could be the entire margin of victory for us in November, and may even swing 1 or 2 House seats in 2012.

Yeah I blog.


Project Vote did a diary on this issue last week (0.00 / 0)
You can read it here: http://www.openleft.com/showDi...

[ Parent ]





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