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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
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This Year's Hanging Chad

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Once again in Ohio, the presidential polls are tied and its 20 electoral votes up for grabs. Such scenarios generally don't lend themselves to gentle politics.

Ohio Republicans have been raging at what they claim is a raft of phony voter registrations by Democrats. (Rush Limbaugh has been whipping up passions on his end.) They've put a face on their wrath, and it belongs to Jennifer Brunner, Ohio's secretary of state and a Democrat.

"Eight different actions were filed against me in just a month," Brunner told me. This being Ohio, Brunner said she expected election-related suits, but she "was assuming eight for the whole election season." She's also received death threats.

Here's the issue: Federal law requires states to check new registrants against databases at their motor vehicle bureau or the Social Security Administration. Any mismatch is flagged for later examination.

Ohio has had 660,000 new registration applications, and the information on as many as 200,000 did not match that on one of the databases.

The Ohio Republican Party demanded a list of all flagged names. Brunner refused, fearing that partisan poll workers would use the information to challenge thousands of voters on Election Day. Her worry is chaos at the polls and long lines that would discourage many from participating.

These non-matches are common and usually reflect computer error or a bureaucrat's sloppy typing. In some states, 30 percent of the names didn't match, according to the Brennan Center at the New York University Law School.

Complicating matters, Ohio's motor vehicle bureau has often (and unnecessarily) used the Social Security database after getting a perfect match from a driver's license. That opened new avenues for discrepancies.

Among Ohioans flagged as mismatches is Joe the Plumber — Toledo's Joe Wurzelbacher, made famous in the third presidential debate. Another was Jon Husted, the speaker of the Ohio House and a Republican.

Both cases involved a misspelled name.

Ohioans have every reason to express concern over possible sham registrations, Brunner says. But the state has ways to deal with that.

"Because of multilayered checks, very few fraudulent votes will get through," she insists. "When people show up to vote on Election Day, they'll still have to provide their identification." That could be a photo identification — driver's license, other state or military ID — or a recent document (bank statement, utility bill) showing a name and address that conforms with board of elections records.

Voters who can't resolve discrepancies but believe they are properly registered must be given provisional ballots. These ballots are counted much later after a verification process.

Large numbers of provisional ballots create "huge problems," Brunner said. For each such ballot, the voter has to make a lengthy statement, as does a poll worker. That's why election officials dread mass challenges of voter eligibility at the polls.

Daniel Tokaji, a specialist in election law at Ohio State University, sides with Brunner on this. "In a close election," he said, "you can imagine the parties are going to be fighting tooth and nail over every provisional ballot. The hanging chad of this year is provisional ballots."

On Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned a lower federal court's order to supply the list of mismatched names to Ohio Republicans, and the GOP immediately filed suit in the state Supreme Court. The state party chairman then accused Brunner of "actively working to conceal fraudulent activity in this election" and called on Ohioans to be "outraged and disgusted by her partisanship."

Two weeks to go before the election battle is over — or just beginning if close results make Ohio a deciding factor. Too bad. Autumn should be a pretty time in the Buckeye State.

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

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Ma'am;...Death threats for Jennifer Brunner??? Death threats for Mr. Obama???. Is that the end to it??? I doubt it... A lot of people seem to equate mad John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry as the opening shots of the Civil War... I think the Civil War was the second American Revolution. We had our revolution, and the constitution was a counter revolution, making certain the rights of government, and property, and giving only a nod to civil rights... To an extent, it worked fine, but it endangered all Liberty with its support of slavery, so this right of property had to end. At first, the North considered leaving the union, but they gradually gained the balance of power, and when that happened, rather than go along, the South left the Union... And so, the revolution began... Does this seem right that the counter revolution began before the revolution??? Some times, the social forces gather strength, change for and against, forward and back hold until one side or the other gains strength, and that could be the end of it if the past and its agents would justly give way... Too many people hold too long onto the past... Slavery never worked as a form of relationship or a form of economy... And the Masters were given their rights in the counter revolution, and they were, for the most part, well within their rights, as written, until they tried to expand those rights... The violence was always there... Slavery is violence... So, at this point in time it does not matter who is killed because another death only adds to the toll. Capitalism is violence too. Like chattel slavery, wage slavery injures and kills people. I have seen them die, violent senseless deaths, not prosecuted as crime, endured... People are being removed from their rights, and from their homes... They are losing their wealth, and their hope... Am I surprised that some blame the democrats??? Not at all... Today's democrats are yesturday's whigs, cattle thieves in the parlance of England... In the dance of time they have traded places with the repubicans...And both parties are sitting on a powder keg, sharing a smoke... Violence is all around us, often just beneath the surface... I would never have believed that the republicans would be so eager to rock the roll... I never thought they would incite to violence and so threaten the peace... I would suggest to all who want war or revolution, that they are like fires... There are only two types of fires: under control, and out of control...Any person who starts a fire without the certain ability to put it out is an arsonist... The republicans should be more careful with fire... Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Tue Oct 21, 2008 7:09 PM
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