Published: August 14, 2012
Update: On Wednesday afternoon, Jon Husted, the Ohio Secretary of State, announced that all Ohio counties would follow a uniform early-voting policy. The policy would extend early-voting hours to 7 p.m. on weekdays during the last two weeks before the election, though all early voting is banned during the final three days of the campaign.
If you live in Butler or Warren counties in the Republican-leaning
suburbs of Cincinnati, you can vote for president beginning in October
by going to a polling place in the evening or on weekends. Republican
officials in those counties want to make it convenient for their
residents to vote early and avoid long lines on Election Day.
But, if you live in Cincinnati, you’re out of luck. Republicans on the
county election board are planning to end early voting in the city
promptly at 5 p.m., and ban it completely on weekends, according to The Cincinnati Enquirer. The convenience, in other words, will not be extended to the city’s working people.
The sleazy politics behind the disparity is obvious. Hamilton County,
which contains Cincinnati, is largely Democratic and voted solidly for
Barack Obama in 2008. So did the other urban areas of Cleveland,
Columbus and Akron, where Republicans, with the assistance of the Ohio
secretary of state, Jon Husted, have already eliminated the extended
hours for early voting.
County election boards in Ohio, a closely contested swing state, are
evenly divided between Democrats and Republicans. In counties likely to
vote for President Obama, Republicans have voted against the extended
hours, and Mr. Husted has broken the tie in their favor. (He said the
counties couldn’t afford the long hours.) In counties likely to vote for
Mitt Romney, Republicans have not objected to the extended hours.
This is just the latest alarming example of how Republicans across the
country are trying to manipulate the electoral system by blocking the
voting rights of their opponents. These actions have a disproportionate
effect on blacks, Hispanics and other ethnic minorities who struggled
for so long to participate in American democracy.
Cincinnati, for example, is 45 percent black, and Cleveland 53 percent.
Butler County, however, is 8 percent black, and Warren 3.5 percent. This
kind of racial disparity is clearly visible wherever Republicans have
trampled on voting rights during Mr. Obama’s term.
In Florida, more than half of black voters went to the polls early in
2008 largely to support Mr. Obama. So, last year, Republican lawmakers
there severely curtailed the early voting period. In Pennsylvania and
other states that have imposed strict voter ID requirements, the impact
will be felt hardest by blacks, Hispanics, older citizens and students,
all of whom tend to lack government ID cards at a higher rate than the
general population. At the trial in Pennsylvania over the
constitutionality of the state’s voter ID law, the plaintiffs introduced
clear evidence, compiled by a geographic data analysis firm, that registered voters in Philadelphia who lack government ID cards are concentrated in minority and low-income areas.
In Ohio, as in other states, the Republican Party is establishing a
reputation for putting short-term political gain ahead of the most
fundamental democratic rights.
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