Ohio to keep ballot-box limits for now after judge calls them
'unreasonable'
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[September 16, 2020]
By Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Ohio's top election
official declined to loosen restrictions on absentee-ballot drop boxes
on Tuesday after a state judge ruled they were "arbitrary and
unreasonable" and said local officials should be able to install more if
they wish.
The ruling initially appeared to be a victory for Democrats who have
pressed for more drop boxes to accommodate voters who don't want to
return absentee ballots by mail in the Nov. 3 presidential election.
But Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, a Republican, will not change
rules that only allow one drop box for each of the state's 88 counties,
spokeswoman Maggie Sheehan said.
"Today's ruling didn't change anything, and the secretary's directive
remains in place," she said.
Drop boxes have become a partisan flash point in the presidential
election. Democrats have promoted them as a reasonable and reliable
option for voters unnerved by the COVID-19 pandemic and U.S. Postal
Service delivery problems.
Republican officials and President Donald Trump's campaign have sought
to limit them in many states, arguing without evidence that the
receptacles could enable voting fraud.
In Ohio, LaRose's restrictions leave the 864,000 registered voters of
Cuyahoga County, a Democratic stronghold, with the same number of drop
boxes as the 8,400 registered voters of Republican-leaning Vinton
County.
Opinion polls show Trump holding a narrow lead over Democratic rival Joe
Biden in Ohio.
Ohio Judge Richard Frye ruled that local authorities can set up more
drop boxes. "Wholly arbitrary rules are entitled to no deference," he
wrote.
Democrats said that should allow local officials to set up more drop
boxes if they wish.
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A voters completes a paper ballot at the Butler County Board of
Elections office in Hamilton, Ohio, U.S. March 12, 2020. Picture
taken March 12, 2020. REUTERS/Bryan Woolston
But the judge's decision did not strike down the rule outright, and
Sheehan indicated LaRose may appeal. "Ohioans are fortunate that the
judicial branch offers the opportunity to appeal a single trial
judge's opinion," she said.
Ohio Representative Paula Hicks-Hudson, a Democrat, said LaRose had
told her he would follow any court ruling, rather than pursue an
appeal. "I'm calling on the secretary of state to keep his word,"
she said on a conference call.
Democrats and Republicans have waged a state-by-state battle over
absentee voting procedures ahead of the election, which could see up
to half of all ballots sent through the mail.
In Pennsylvania, the state's top election official said on Monday
that local officials can't discard returned mail ballots if the
signature does not resemble one kept on file.
In Arizona, a federal judge ruled last week that state officials
must give voters a chance to fix ballots that are returned without a
signature, rather than rejecting them outright.
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan; Editing by Scott Malone, Dan Grebler
and Jonathan Oatis)
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