ONTD Political

Ohio GOP Election Board Member: Our Voting Process Shouldn’t Accommodate Black Voters

12:39 pm - 08/19/2012
Ohio GOP Election Board Member: Our Voting Process Shouldn’t Accommodate Black Voters

Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted’s recent decision to prohibit early voting on nights and weekends in all districts has many concerned about the effect on voter turnout in the state, particularly among low-income and minority communities. But one Republican Party chairman is content to suppress votes among this vulnerable demographic. Doug Preisse, chairman of the Republican Party in Franklin County, which contains the city of Columbus, admitted in an email to the Columbus Dispatch that black voters would now have a more difficult time voting:

I guess I really actually feel we shouldn’t contort the voting process to accommodate the urban — read African-American — voter-turnout machine. Let’s be fair and reasonable.

Preisse was one of the board of elections members who blocked Democratic efforts in Franklin County to expand voting hours to evenings and weekends. According to the Dispatch, he called claims of unfairness “bullshit. Quote me!”

Preisse also served on Newt Gingrich’s leadership team in Ohio during the primary and is a top political consultant to Ohio governor John Kasich (R).

In 2008, 82 percent of early voters in Franklin County voted on nights or weekends. The Secretary of State has defended the move to cut hours across the state by pointing to his initiative sending absentee ballots to every registered voter. But according to a study by Northeast Ohio Voter Advocates, black voters and Democrats prefer to cast their ballots in person, with 13.3 percent of black Ohioans casting early ballots in 2008 compared to just 8 percent of white voters.

Secretary of State Husted most recently suspended two Democratic members of the Montgomery County Election Board for voting to allow weekend voting in spite of the directive to restrict hours.

Source

OP; Isn't this something the Fed would step in to fix? I've heard of states limiting voting in democratic districts too. Why aren't more people angry?
moonbladem 19th-Aug-2012 07:51 pm (UTC)
My question is, how is any of this constitutional? Or is the GOP only big on the constitution only when it suits them, like the right to bear arms? Why isn't the federal government coming down hard on these states with these idiotic voting rules and Voter ID laws?

I really hope that the GOP loses more seats. If they had their way, they'd take away the rights of minorities, women, seniors, LGBTQ community, the poor... basically anyone who isn't white, Christian, rich and male. I'm really tired of their bullshit.
furrygreen 19th-Aug-2012 07:58 pm (UTC)
That's what I wonder! On the principle that senators and the like have families, and they can't know if those family members will own property, you'd think they'd make more noise about it, right?
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