Ohio Supreme Court restores voting rights proposal after Republicans split it in four
The Ohio Supreme Court on Tuesday overruled a decision from Republicans on the Ohio Ballot Board, ordering them to certify that a proposed voter-access referendum only spans a single issue.
The Ballot Board chaired by Secretary of State Frank LaRose sliced the referendum into four parts in March. This quadrupled the number of signatures organizers would need to gather from about 443,000 to 1.8 million in order to get the referendum on the November ballot.
As proposed, the amendment makes several changes designed to make it easier to vote. Specifically, it would:
Remove the requirement that Ohioans be registered at least 30 days before they vote
Allow Ohioans to register to vote on Election Day
Provide for automatic voter registration through the BMV (unless one opts out)
Allow in-person voting on weekdays in the 28 days before Election Day and on the last two weekends before Election Day
Guarantee full and equal access for people with disabilities to register and vote
Grant military personnel an absentee ballot 46 days before an election
Require a representative sample of statewide elections to be audited to ensure accuracy and integrity
Republicans, who control three of five seats on the board, argued the provisions fall into four separate subjects: election administration, voter registration, access to voting for disabled people, and post-election audits. Their vote divided the referendum as such.
Read more: https://ohiocapitaljournal.com/2020/04/15/ohio-supreme-court-restores-voting-rights-proposal-after-republicans-split-it-in-four/