It doesn’t take much to start a political spat in Ohio, where jockeying for every presidential vote is practically blood sport. The latest pits President Barack Obama’s campaign against groups representing military voters, an uncomfortable place for the commander in chief. At issue is the legality of an Ohio law cutting three days out of the early-voting period for everyone except members of the armed forces and Ohio citizens living overseas. The dispute reaches court today, thanks to what the Obama campaign describes as its first lawsuit anywhere in the nation for the 2012 election. Put simply, looser rules for early voting are seen by both political parties as an advantage for Obama because they may encourage minorities, young people and other harder-to-reach voters to cast a ballot. Military votes are thought to lean Republican.
As state lawmakers debated changes to election laws, the Ohio Association of Election Officials endorsed the idea of cutting the three final early-voting days, those just before Election Day, contending they needed the extra time over the weekend to prepare for Tuesday voting. Democrats say it smacks of political manipulation to restrict in-person voting for most people while giving service members extra time to cast a ballot, even if they are not stationed abroad. They want the three days added back for everyone. “Ohio has arbitrarily decided to turn most, but not all, voters away from open in-person voting locations for no reason at all,” attorneys for the Obama campaign write in court filings.
Republicans see a chance to drive a wedge between Obama and parts of the country where the military culture runs deeps. A Gallup poll in August found a 57-35 advantage for Mitt Romney over Obama among veterans. Romney was fast off the mark when the issue flared, declaring his opposition to the lawsuit against the state’s attorney general and top elections official, and his solidarity with the 15 military organizations opposing the legal challenge. “I’ll work to protect the voting rights of our military, not undermine them,” Romney said in a statement. Democrats said that veterans, the elderly or infirm, are among those disadvantaged by not having the extra days to vote.
Full Article: Campaigns spar over Ohio election law – The Crescent News.