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Republican Challenges To Voters Loom Across The U.S.
Lawyers in five states geared up Tuesday for a series of voter challenges that promised to mark this Election Day with as much contentiousness as the presidential race it was intended to resolve.
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The most dramatic court battle was playing out here in Ohio. After a short period of seesawing court decisions, a federal appeals court ruled early Tuesday that the Republican Party could place thousands of people inside polling places to challenge the eligibility of voters, a blow to Democrats who said challengers would intimidate minority voters.
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The most dramatic court battle was playing out here in Ohio. After a short period of seesawing court decisions, a federal appeals court ruled early Tuesday that the Republican Party could place thousands of people inside polling places to challenge the eligibility of voters, a blow to Democrats who said challengers would intimidate minority voters.
The appeals court said that while it was in the public interest that registered voters cast ballots freely, there was also "strong public interest in permitting legitimate statutory processes to operate to preclude voting by those who are not entitled to vote."
The ruling, by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, in Cincinnati, reversed two lower courts that had blocked the challenges just hours before. It also came as squadrons of lawyers from both parties
in Ohio and other swing states from Pennsylvania to Florida to New Mexico were preparing for Election Day skirmishes that will include using arcane laws that allow challenges at the polls. The cases may foreshadow lawsuits that are likely to be filed in any state crucial to the Electoral College calculus.
The appeals court said the Republicans could put 3,500 challengers inside polling places. Democrats also planned to send more than 2,000 monitors to the polls, though they said those people would not challenge voters.
The Republicans say that challenging, a practice that has been allowed under Ohio law for decades but rarely used, weeds out fraud often missed by election workers. Democrats assert that the challenges disproportionately single out low-income and minority voters, which Republicans deny.
The battle over Election Day challenges has been most intense in Ohio, not only because the race here was so close and so vital to President George W. Bush and Senator John Kerry, but also because the Republican Party had larger and more aggressive plans to challenge voters here than in other states.
In their separate rulings in the lower courts barring the challengers, Judge Susan Dlott of U.S. District Court in Cincinnati and Judge John Adams in Akron agreed that procedures already existed to prevent fraud at the voting place. And they said that challenges inside polling stations might create chaos and delays that could intimidate voters.
In seeking the delicate balance between preventing fraud and upholding voting rights, the judges said, the scales should tip toward voting rights.
"Voter intimidation severely burdens the right to vote, and prevention of such intimidation is a compelling state interest," wrote Dlott
Read More
http://www.iht.com/articles/2004/11/02/news/ohio.html
The ruling, by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, in Cincinnati, reversed two lower courts that had blocked the challenges just hours before. It also came as squadrons of lawyers from both parties
in Ohio and other swing states from Pennsylvania to Florida to New Mexico were preparing for Election Day skirmishes that will include using arcane laws that allow challenges at the polls. The cases may foreshadow lawsuits that are likely to be filed in any state crucial to the Electoral College calculus.
The appeals court said the Republicans could put 3,500 challengers inside polling places. Democrats also planned to send more than 2,000 monitors to the polls, though they said those people would not challenge voters.
The Republicans say that challenging, a practice that has been allowed under Ohio law for decades but rarely used, weeds out fraud often missed by election workers. Democrats assert that the challenges disproportionately single out low-income and minority voters, which Republicans deny.
The battle over Election Day challenges has been most intense in Ohio, not only because the race here was so close and so vital to President George W. Bush and Senator John Kerry, but also because the Republican Party had larger and more aggressive plans to challenge voters here than in other states.
In their separate rulings in the lower courts barring the challengers, Judge Susan Dlott of U.S. District Court in Cincinnati and Judge John Adams in Akron agreed that procedures already existed to prevent fraud at the voting place. And they said that challenges inside polling stations might create chaos and delays that could intimidate voters.
In seeking the delicate balance between preventing fraud and upholding voting rights, the judges said, the scales should tip toward voting rights.
"Voter intimidation severely burdens the right to vote, and prevention of such intimidation is a compelling state interest," wrote Dlott
Read More
http://www.iht.com/articles/2004/11/02/news/ohio.html
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Republicans will be allowed to challenge voters' eligibility at polling stations throughout Ohio, a U.S. federal appeals court ruled early Tuesday.
The decision overturns the orders of two federal judges on Monday, who blocked Republican challengers from entering the polls, despite a state law that allows them to do so.
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1099398130557_3/?hub=TopStories
The decision overturns the orders of two federal judges on Monday, who blocked Republican challengers from entering the polls, despite a state law that allows them to do so.
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1099398130557_3/?hub=TopStories
They've hired lawyers to do the dirty work for them. This aint their daddy's Klan.
The most beautiful thing will be when they lose anyway, and with all the vote-supression documentation going on today, there might be grounds for investigations after the elections, and the powers that will be might be interested in pursuing charges for once. Thai might be a real important first test of a new admin, and a real handy tool to keep Kerry real, at least coming out the gate. (well, that and troops out now!!)
Only of course, if the vote swindle doesn't work. Every voting nay-sayer should remember, it was the democrap-appointed judges who tried to stop this, and the repibliscum-appointed ones who said, why yes, that's a fine idea, Mr. Klan......
The most beautiful thing will be when they lose anyway, and with all the vote-supression documentation going on today, there might be grounds for investigations after the elections, and the powers that will be might be interested in pursuing charges for once. Thai might be a real important first test of a new admin, and a real handy tool to keep Kerry real, at least coming out the gate. (well, that and troops out now!!)
Only of course, if the vote swindle doesn't work. Every voting nay-sayer should remember, it was the democrap-appointed judges who tried to stop this, and the repibliscum-appointed ones who said, why yes, that's a fine idea, Mr. Klan......
Published: Nov 1, 2004
Modified: Nov 2, 2004 9:00 AM
Six news groups sue Ohio elections chief
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
http://newsobserver.com/24hour/nation/story/1787536p-9649852c.html
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Six national news organizations filed a federal lawsuit Monday seeking additional access at the polls on Election Day.
ABC, CNN, CBS, Fox News, NBC and The Associated Press sued Ohio Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell over a policy that would prevent exit polling within 100 feet of a voting place.
The organizations have formed a consortium to collect exit-polling data.
The news organizations said the prohibition hinders their ability to gather information about the political process and violates constitutional guarantees of free speech. They contend exit-poll reporters were allowed access within 100 feet of polls in the March primary.
Blackwell's spokesman Carlo LoParo cited increased media interest in the November election.
Anticipating a crush of voters and media Tuesday, Blackwell told county boards of election to enforce a state law barring anyone except voters, election officials, challengers and witnesses from inside the 100-foot limit, LoParo said.
Modified: Nov 2, 2004 9:00 AM
Six news groups sue Ohio elections chief
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
http://newsobserver.com/24hour/nation/story/1787536p-9649852c.html
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Six national news organizations filed a federal lawsuit Monday seeking additional access at the polls on Election Day.
ABC, CNN, CBS, Fox News, NBC and The Associated Press sued Ohio Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell over a policy that would prevent exit polling within 100 feet of a voting place.
The organizations have formed a consortium to collect exit-polling data.
The news organizations said the prohibition hinders their ability to gather information about the political process and violates constitutional guarantees of free speech. They contend exit-poll reporters were allowed access within 100 feet of polls in the March primary.
Blackwell's spokesman Carlo LoParo cited increased media interest in the November election.
Anticipating a crush of voters and media Tuesday, Blackwell told county boards of election to enforce a state law barring anyone except voters, election officials, challengers and witnesses from inside the 100-foot limit, LoParo said.
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