Lawmakers spar over proposal
COLUMBUS (AP) — Ohio Democrats greeted a GOP proposal to eliminate an early-voting period with a barrage of skeptical questions Tuesday, previewing a contentious standoff in this legislature’s final month.
Democrats are trying to block what they view as poorly conceived legislation fueled by GOP emotions over elections disputes in the months before the Nov. 4 presidential contest. Republicans say they have a narrowly tailored proposal that addresses the concerns of Democratic Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner — and they only have one month remaining in which they control both the House and the Senate.
The bill would eliminate a weeklong period during which Ohio voters can register and cast a ballot on the same day. About 13,000 Ohioans cast a ballot during the period from Sept. 30 to Oct. 6, while Republicans unsuccessfully challenged the procedure in court. They said Ohio law never intended there to be same-day registration and voting, and that it could open the door to voter fraud because elections officials wouldn’t have time to verify voter information.
The proposed policy would require voters wishing to vote early to be registered at least 30 days before they cast a ballot. For example, someone wanting to vote 30 days before the election would have to be registered 60 days before Election Day.
The bill would also allow observers at polling places during early voting, stipulate what voters must fill out on the envelope that covers an absentee ballot, and require the secretary of state to provide to local elections officials the names of voters whose registration information doesn’t match data in other government databases.
Three of the bill’s components are responses to lawsuits the GOP waged against Brunner in the weeks leading up to Election Day.
“This is not a bill that makes drastic or sweeping changes to Ohio elections law,” state Sen. Bill Seitz, a Cincinnati Republican, told the Senate State & Local Government & Veterans Affairs Committee Tuesday. Seitz said Brunner had micromanaged the election by issuing more than 100 directives to local elections boards, and had struck “mortal fear” in elections board officials by removing those who disagreed with her.
Democrats came to Brunner’s defense, attempting to ask questions about whether Seitz had tried to work with the secretary of state on the bill. They also asked how someone moving from one county to another would be affected by the registration deadline, and whether the GOP had any documented cases of voter fraud.
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