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John Kasich Signs Bill To Repeal Voting Law Changes In Ohio

Reuters  |  Posted: Updated: 05/16/2012 5:44 pm


By Kim Palmer

CLEVELAND, May 15 (Reuters) - Ohio's Republican Governor John Kasich signed a bill on Tuesday reversing a contentious voting law that Democrats have called a blatant attempt at voter repression, in a move aimed at pre-empting a threatened repeal referendum.

The bill rolled back a law passed last year barring counties from mailing unsolicited absentee ballots to voters and removing a requirement that poll workers assist voters they knew were voting in the wrong location.

But the measure stopped short of reversing a related measure that eliminated in-person voting on the three days immediately preceding an election, as Democrats want.

Ohio's Republican leadership has worried that a referendum on the voting law would drive Democratic-leaning voters to the polls in greater numbers in the November election, which they fear could benefit President Barack Obama in a key swing state.

"With the law at the heart of the referendum ... having been repealed, there is no longer a question to place before the voters," Ohio's Republican Secretary of State Jon Husted said in a statement.

Supporters of the original law said its provisions, combined with stricter voter identification laws, reduce the risk of voter fraud. Critics disagree.

"The overwhelming evidence ... indicates that voter fraud is virtually non-existent, and that these new laws will make it harder for hundreds of thousands of elderly, disabled, minority, young, rural and low-income Americans to exercise their right to vote," Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown told supporters in Cleveland last week.

Fair Elections Ohio, the voting rights group that mounted the referendum campaign, said that according to the law, only the referendum petition committee, not the Secretary of State, can remove the referendum from the Nov. 6 ballot.

Greg Moore, campaign director for Fair Elections Ohio, told Reuters he still hopes for a bipartisan compromise that will allow for early voting, but wasn't sure where that leaves the referendum.

"In 2008, 100,000 people, 19 percent of voters, voted in the three days before the election. We will keep pushing until we get a full repeal," he said. (Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Todd Eastham)

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By Kim Palmer CLEVELAND, May 15 (Reuters) - Ohio's Republican Governor John Kasich signed a bill on Tuesday reversing a contentious voting law that Democrats have called a blatant att...
By Kim Palmer CLEVELAND, May 15 (Reuters) - Ohio's Republican Governor John Kasich signed a bill on Tuesday reversing a contentious voting law that Democrats have called a blatant att...
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03:56 PM on 05/16/2012
Gov. Kasich and the Ohio Republican Party are bound and determined to prevent Ohio voters from having a say on these issues. The arrogance we continue to observe in states with Republican-controlled legislatures is almost breathtaking.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
TeraWatt60
Cogito Ergo Sum
02:30 PM on 05/16/2012
Amazing Teapublicans all get "hair on fire" about supposed voter fraud among Democratic-leaning groups but the only real voter fraud has been a REPUBLICAN Secretary of State who they are now trying to get off with a misdemeanor so he can STAY in OFFICE
Dad24
The Right is Wrong
01:15 PM on 05/16/2012
It's all about voter suppression. The Republicans are doing everything they can to keep Democrats from voting. In this case, by backing off a bit from their over-zealous efforts to limit voting, they hope that the issue becomes minor enough to keep Democrats from flocking to the polls to repeal it. Republican Hypocrisy in action, once again.
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03:12 PM on 05/16/2012
It is not about voter suppression, it's about making sure that only legal citizens vote. The Black Panther with a night stick is not considered voter intimidation by Democrats.
03:57 PM on 05/16/2012
Really? The Black Panthers? So which of those two guys do you most fear?
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zippy335
It's only hypocrisy if someone else does it.
03:58 PM on 05/16/2012
Your example prevented exactly 0 people from voting.

This voter suppression law will prevent thousands of legal voters from voting.

It's about voter suppression.
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12:59 PM on 05/16/2012
THIS MAN NEEDS VOTED OUT ASAP!
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Steve Davis 1
moderate with convictions, techie yet curmudgeon
11:55 AM on 05/16/2012
It is always about the strategy. Voter fraud such a bogus issue when confronted with another campaign to repeal, the still wound licking Kaisch takes the path of least peril. Ohio has already proved itself at capable of suppressing Democratic voters.
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Cathy Coudriet
10:38 AM on 05/16/2012
This is called checks and balance
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01:27 PM on 05/16/2012
You are talking about those from the Koch brothers (and the like) and balancing his own personal checkbook, right?
10:30 AM on 05/16/2012
The lesson to be learned here is that even right wing politicians will listen if they want to get re-elected and see enough people getting together to oppose them. Kasich has shown that he wants to continue being a governor and is willing to compromise in order to further his career.
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SmartAmerica
Tau Zero: Because I'm leaving this world alive!
09:55 AM on 05/16/2012
REPUBLICANS: If you can't convince people to vote for your b/s, prevent them from voting at all.
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goleafsgo
A Lie stands on one leg, Truth on two.
02:27 PM on 05/16/2012
I think I saw that on a bumper sticker somewhere.