Ohio Primary ColorsAired June 14, 2006 An independent committee is reviewing the primary election in Cuyahoga County after problems delayed the vote tallies to be reported until the week after election day. But for all those glitches, election officials are warning that the November voting could be much worse. ideastream's Mark Urycki reports. Ohio elections were back in the spotlight last week. The New York Times called on Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell to turn over his election duties while he runs for governor. Rolling Stone magazine ran an article by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. implying that Ohio's 2004 presidential election was stolen. And Democrats said the Ohio Republican Party is setting election restrictions to suppress the vote in order to give themselves a better chance of winning. And at a Cleveland conference on lessons from the primary, a spokesman for Congressman Stephanie Tubbs Jones, said Cuyahoga County may have to come to up with its own standards for fair elections. Chris Nance quoted the former head of the national Election Assistance Commission DeForest Soaries.
Soaries was so frustrated with lack of national standards and lack of Congressional support that he quit the EAC. Summit County Elections Director Bryan Williams said the Help America Vote Act was simply too rushed, forcing counties to adopt new voting machines before all the bugs were worked out. But he also said policies are unclear and that is stressing the system.
Those issues in Ohio sprung from Secretary of State Blackwell's orders that restricted reporters from polling places, that required registration cards on a certain weight paper, and that threw out provisional ballots if voters showed up at the wrong precinct. The Franklin County Elections Director Matt Damschroder - a Republican - warned that every county cannot just go its own way
Election officials in Cuyahoga, Franklin, and Summit Counties believe that more experience and better training can overcome problems with new electronic voting machines. But a new requirement from the state legislature frightens them. House Bill 3, as interpreted by the Secretary of State, requires people who register voters send their forms directly to his office, not to the League of Women of Voters or public library or whatever group they work for. Failure to do so could result in a felony. That will suppress the vote, says retired Case Professor Norman Robbins of the Greater Cleveland Voter Coalition. The law also requires voters bring a drivers license or particular type of identification and that, says Robbins, means certain groups will lose out.
Robbins says the new ID requirements will prompt a large increase in the amount of provisional ballots being requested. And he believes 40% of the provisional ballots in Cuyahoga were unnecessarily thrown out in 2004. Cuyahoga County Election director Michael Vu predicted this November's election will be decided by provisional ballots.
Vu and others said the only way to overcome problems will be to implement a massive voter education drive between now and November. Mark Urycki, 90.3 News. |