|
10.17.08
U.S. Supreme Court Protects Newly Registered Ohioans’ Voting Rights
ACLU Hails Decision As A Major Victory For Ohio Voters
WASHINGTON – In a major victory for voting rights, the U.S. Supreme
Court today issued an order protecting voters in Ohio from attempts to
challenge their registrations based on small inaccuracies in government
databases. The order reverses an appeals court decision that would have
required Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner to provide all 88 county
Boards of Elections with lists of mismatched voters for whom there were
discrepancies between the information on their registration forms and
other government databases. The American Civil Liberties Union filed a
friend-of-the-court brief early this morning in support of Brunner’s
position.
“We are grateful that the Supreme Court reversed the flawed appeals
court decision. This decision protects the voting rights of hundreds of
thousands of Ohioans,” said Meredith Bell-Platts, staff counsel with the
ACLU Voting Rights Project. “Had this program gone forward Ohio voters
would have been subjected to added confusion and chaos at the polls.
While there are plenty of other voter suppression strategies being
deployed in Ohio and across the country, at least this one has been put
to rest.”
Had the program gone forward, failed matches could have resulted in
hundreds of thousands of voters being purged from the rolls, challenged
at the polls or required to cast provisional ballots.
“This is a major victory for Ohio voters. We hope that political parties
will think twice the next time they try to play games with voter lists
in the weeks before an election,” said Carrie Davis, staff counsel with
the ACLU of Ohio. “Purging voters because of data errors is unlawful. We
must continue to be vigilant and fight against these and other forms of
voter suppression.”
On Thursday, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio
ordered Brunner to provide the information in the databases. That
decision was reversed the next day by a panel of three judges from the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. Upon hearing the case, the
full appeals court overruled the panel and ordered Brunner to provide
the information. Brunner appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court and the case
is called Ohio Republican Party, et. al. v. Brunner.
The Supreme Court’s order is available
here.
The ACLU’s friend-of-the-court brief is available
here.
More information about the ACLU’s voting rights cases is available
online at:
www.aclu.org/votingrights/gen/36949res20080929.html
More information about the ACLU of Ohio's voting rights cases is
available here.
|