<<http://www.mydd.com/story/2004/9/27/125755/309>>

Remember that story over the weekend on how Democrats are crushing
Republicans in new voter registration in Florida and Ohio? Well, in a
move that would make a Mississippi election board from the 1950's proud,
Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell is attempting to block thousands of
those new registrations because of paper stock (PDF): 
Voters-rights advocates are criticizing two recent decisions by Ohio
Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell that they say will unfairly limit
some people's ability to vote Nov. 2. Blackwell's office has told county
boards of elections to follow strictly two provisions in Ohio election
law:
 
One requires Ohio voter registration cards be printed on thick, 80-pound
stock paper. 

The other ordered boards to strictly interpret the rules regarding
provisional ballots, the ones cast by voters who move before the election
but are still registered in Ohio.
The paper-stock issue is frustrating Montgomery County Board of Elections
officials, who have a backlog of registrations to complete. If they get
an Ohio voter registration card on paper thinner than required, they are
mailing a new card out to the voter. But if they still have the backlog
by the registration deadline, Oct. 4, voters will not have another chance
to get their correct paperwork in, said Steve Harsman, deputy director of
the Montgomery County board. In Montgomery County there is a backlog of
around 4,000 registrations, Harsman said. A few hundred could be affected
by this provision, he said.

This is utterly despicable and un-American. This is an obvious, partisan
attempt to disenfranchise new voters and deny them their civil rights in
a state where new voters tend to be minorities and working class. Notify
your local news media about this travesty. Drop Blackwell a line, or ten,
as well.


....
Voting Rights Act of 1971
42 U.S.C. 1971

No person acting under color of law shall . . . deny the right of any
individual to vote in any election because of an error or omission on any
record or paper relating to any application, registration, or other act
requisite to voting, if such error or omission is not material in
determining whether such individual is qualified under State law to vote
in such election. 



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"Where annual elections end, there slavery begins" -- John Adams


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