|
10.02.08
ACLU Asks Court to Allow Rejected Absentee Ballot Applications
Group Sides With Voters in ‘Check-Box’ Dispute
COLUMBUS, OH- The American Civil Liberties Union and Brennan Center
will file a friend-of-the-court brief today asking the Ohio Supreme
Court to protect voters’ rights and allow rejected absentee ballot
applications to be processed. The lawsuit was brought by two Hamilton
County voters who completed absentee ballot request forms that were
rejected because of an unchecked box.
On September 5, 2008, Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner issued a
memorandum instructing county Boards of Elections to not process
absentee ballot request forms that have an unchecked box next to the
signature of the voter, declaring him or her to be a qualified elector.
The forms with the box were sent to over one million Ohio voters by the
McCain campaign. The box is not required by Ohio law to be included on
the forms.
“This is a clear case of bureaucracy hampering the rights of voters. The
rejected forms included all of the information that is required by Ohio
law and the box that was left unchecked is not even required to be on
absentee ballot request forms. It is unfair to require voters to submit
additional forms over meaningless technicalities that could prevent some
from casting ballots,” said ACLU of Ohio Staff Counsel Carrie Davis.
Over 1,500 absentee ballot request forms were rejected in Hamilton
County alone, with thousands more voters affected throughout the state.
Secretary Brunner requested that county Boards of Elections contact all
affected voters to inform them they need to complete another form.
“With thousands of voters affected across the state, it will be
difficult for Boards of Elections to contact each person directly. There
will likely be people who do not know their application was rejected,
find out too late, cannot access another form easily or become
disillusioned with the process and won’t cast a ballot. This type of
political maneuvering presents an undue burden on voters and violates
their constitutional rights,” said Meredith Bell-Platts, staff counsel
with the ACLU Voting Rights Project.
"County Boards of Elections will expend a great deal of resources
contacting the thousands of voters whose applications were unfairly
rejected. This will expend precious time and resources on a bureaucratic
issue, while Boards of Elections should be preparing to make sure
Election Day run as smoothly as possible. The court should do the right
thing and order these applications to be processed," Davis concluded.
-30-
Read the Amicus Brief
|