ADVERTISEMENT

    Ohio Voting Rights Groups take Issue with Primary Postponement

    By Tyler Buchanan

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Days after the Ohio Primary Election was postponed, it is still unclear how (or when) voting will proceed.

    Despite that, Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose is not waiting on the courts or the legislature to decide. LaRose has announced a new June 2 voting date on his official government website

    Not only that, but LaRose is already dictating the rules 88 county boards of elections should follow. Among them: that county boards not accept any new voter registrations ahead of the theoretical, not-yet-official June 2 election. 

    The Secretary of State’s office provided a unique defense for pronouncing a new date: LaRose isn’t rescheduling the election, he’s only extending it.

    “The Governor and Secretary took the necessary actions (on March 16) to keep Ohioans safe and protect the integrity of our democracy by extending the March 17th election so voters can safely have their voices heard,” spokesperson Maggie Sheehan told the Capital Journal. “Despite any inference to the contrary, the election has not been rescheduled, it has been extended.”

    It is unclear if this distinction offered by LaRose’s office (rescheduled vs. extended) carries any weight. Election dates are determined by legislative statute, not the Ohio Secretary of State.

    His directive to the county boards of elections has garnered swift criticism from a number of voting rights groups in the state. They believe a new election date should reopen the permitted time period of new registrations.

    The Conflict

    In Ohio, eligible residents must register to vote 30 days prior to a given election in order to cast a ballot.

    The primary election was scheduled for March 17, meaning the deadline for new registrations was Feb. 18. 

    This is where things get hairy. In the intervening weeks, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine and Ohio Department of Health Director Amy Acton issued a number of orders and closures meant to stop the spread of COVID-19. One such order prohibits mass gatherings of 50 people anywhere in the state.

    On March 16, the day before the primary, the Centers for Disease Control recommended even tougher restrictions: that gatherings be limited to just 10 or fewer people. 

    To DeWine and LaRose, it became apparent that hosting an election the next day — with crowded polls in a presidential year — was not a good thing to do. 

    Thus began a very long day in which state officials tried, then ordered the election not take place. They initially failed in the courts when a Franklin County judge refused to step in just 12 hours before polls were set to open. 

    There were rumblings of a late-night appeal or convening an emergency session of the Ohio General Assembly. In the end, Acton decided to order the polls closed as a health emergency. 

    How to Move Forward?

    Now comes the matter of how to proceed with the election. Weeks of early voting and absentee balloting have already occurred. LaRose and DeWine want there to be extended absentee voting and an eventual June 2 voting date.

    Daniel Tokaji, an elections law professor with the Ohio State University Moritz College of Law, has questioned the announcement by LaRose of a June 2 date. In an interview, Tokaji said it is unclear LaRose has the authority to set such a date, even under the circumstances of an emergency postponement.

    “I think it would be advisable for the Ohio legislature to step into the breach and clarify the new date,” he said, “whether it’s June 2 or something else.”

    The Ohio Senate and the Ohio House of Representatives are not scheduled to reconvene until later in March. In the meantime, the Ohio Democrats have filed a lawsuit with the Ohio Supreme Court challenging LaRose’s order. 

    “Uncharted Territory”

    Last Thursday, LaRose received a critical letter sent jointly by the League of Women Voters of Ohio, the A. Philip Randolph Institute of Ohio, the ACLU of Ohio, the Lawyers Committee on Civil Rights and a voting reform group known as Demos. 

    The groups point to Ohio law allowing registration up to 30 days before an election, as well as the National Voter Registration Act, a federal law similarly setting a registration deadline of 30 days before a federal election (in this case, the presidential primary).

    Tokaji also raised this concern, saying that LaRose’s directive is a clear violation of the National Voter Registration Act and will likely be challenged in court if not corrected. 

    In LaRose’s view, June 2 is not its own election date, but is merely an extension of the postponed March 17 date. Thus, the reasoning goes, the February registration deadline still applies even to an election being held in June.

    In an appearance on CNN, LaRose was questioned about the Monday night sequence of pursuing a health emergency rather than appealing the judge’s decision in the courts.

    “I’m not an attorney,” LaRose noted.

    The letter from voting rights groups argues that registration law should be followed even amid a public health crisis. 

    “Yes, in many ways we are in uncharted territory,” wrote Freda Levenson, the legal director for the ACLU of Ohio. “But neither the global pandemic, nor the fact that the election date is changed, means that we need to devolve into anarchy. The national and state laws that protect the rights of Ohio voters are still in effect, and must be followed.”

    Jen Miller, executive director of the League of Women Voters of Ohio, stressed that they believed the decision to postpone the election was a wise decision. However, it is the reaction to that postponement that is under scrutiny.

    “We agree that postponing the election helped protect the health and safety of Ohio voters and poll workers,” stated Jen Miller, Executive Director of the League of Women Voters of Ohio. “Having an accurate, up-to-date registration is the first step for casting a ballot, so voters must be granted the same registration schedule as every other election.”

    Ohio Capital Journal reporter Jake Zuckerman contributed to this report.

    This article was republished with permission from Ohio Capital Journal. For more in Ohio political news, visit www.ohiocapitaljournal.com.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Subscribe

    More to Explore:

    2024 State of the State Address: All About The Kids

    Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine put children at the center of his 2024 State of the State address Wednesday afternoon. He took credit for recent policies to improve reading and offered a few new ideas, too — increase access to child care, improve education outcomes, and bolster health and vision care.

    Ohioans May Vote on a $15 Hourly Minimum Wage in November

    Ohioans could have a chance vote to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2026.

    New Rules for Ohio Pharmacies Coming Next Month to Help Resolve Issues

    The Ohio Board of Pharmacy will soon implement a set of new rules intended to prevent severe understaffing that has endangered patients at some Ohio locations. They’re slated to take effect on May 1.

    Report: Kroger, Walmart & Amazon Inflated Grocery Costs During & After Pandemic

    Looking for someone to blame for increased costs in the grocery aisle? You might not need to look any further than three retail giants, the Federal Trade Commission said in a report last month.

    Fight over Gerrymandering in Ohio Continues

    Ohio Senate President Matt Huffman spoke out last month against a proposed constitutional amendment to remove politicians from the redistricting process and give authority over state redistricting to an independent, citizen-led commission.
    Ohio Capital Journal
    Ohio Capital Journalhttps://ohiocapitaljournal.com
    The Ohio Capital Journal is a hard-hitting, independent, nonprofit news organization dedicated to connecting Ohioans to their state government and its impact on their lives. The Capital Journal combines Ohio state government coverage with relentless investigative journalism, deep dives into the consequences of policy, political insight and principled commentary.
    ADVERTISEMENT