Monday, 26 September 2016 00:00

Court Says Ohio's Voter Purge is Illegal, But Will Rolls Be Restored in Time for Election?

Written by Lauren McCauley | Common Dreams

Ohio's policy is said to be the most aggressive in the nation with more than 2 million registered voters removed since 2011

Further, he agreed with the plaintiffs' argument that the "newly-issued form does nothing to correct the fact that Ohio has, for years, been removing voters from the rolls because they failed to respond to forms that are blatantly non-compliant with the NVRA."

The plaintiffs, which include the A. Philip Randolph Institute, the Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless, and citizen Larry Harmon, argued that purging voters for infrequent voting "has a disparate impact on minority communities" and particularly burdens "poor and illiterate voters [who may be] caught in a purge system which will require them to needlessly re-register."

Though Husted has alleged that the process is done in a uniform manner, a Reuters investigation found that "the policy appears to be helping Republicans in the state's largest metropolitan areas."

According to the news outlet's survey of voter lists, "In the state's three largest counties that include Cleveland, Cincinnati, and Columbus, voters have been struck from the rolls in Democratic-leaning neighborhoods at roughly twice the rate as in Republican neighborhoods."

Similarly, an Enquirer/USA Today probe revealed that in some communities those purged records are kept track of, while in others they are just deleted.

"Depending on where you live, county election officials might diligently remove thousands of voter registrations each year, documented by detailed records. Or they might insist they haven't followed through with the state-ordered process in some years, or apologize for tossing those files years ago," according to the survey of all 88 county board of elections.

USA Today reported:

At best, these records reveal a lack of care by some election officials tracking voters taken off the rolls. 

At worst, they point to a system of removing voters that's far from uniform—meaning where you live could determine when, or if, your voter registration is deleted. And that could affect whose votes count, and whose don't, in a critical battleground state that may determine the next president.

Friday's decision now sends the case back to the lower court, which, according to McClatchy, "must establish a process for either restoring purged voters to the rolls or allowing them to vote provisionally and having all those votes count."

With the presidential election just seven weeks away, the clock is ticking.

Link to original article from Common Dreams

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