bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Sun 20 Apr, 2014 08:46 pm
Voter Suppression -- Ohio's Incredible Tactics
Voter Suppression -- Ohio's Incredible Tactics
Story tools

Comments

A A AResize

Print

Share and Email

The Afro, News Report, Zenitha Prince, Posted: Apr 18, 2014

It was a sunny March morning when Ohio State Sen. Nina Turner (D) and her small band boarded the No. 4 bus, beginning their trek from the Walnut Hills neighborhood of Cincinnati to a proposed new county Board of Elections in Mount Airy.

The trip, she said, was meant to show how a decision to move early voting from downtown to the suburbs would make it extremely difficult for Hamilton County voters that didn’t have a vehicle.

“It took two buses – the second bus was late; one and a half hours one way, and that doesn’t even count the time voters will spend waiting to vote; a half-mile walk since the bus didn’t stop outside the site,” then they had to trod up a long driveway with no sidewalks since the building was situated some way off the street, Turner recalled.

“This is patently unfair,” said the lawmaker, who was joined by other Democratic colleagues and community activists. “How many hurdles should you have to jump to vote?”

According to the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2012 American Community Survey, almost 13 percent of Hamilton County households –mostly in Cincinnati—do not own a vehicle, creating a potential barrier to early voting given the relatively difficult access to the new site.

It is but one of several new laws and policies that rolls back access to the ballot box in Ohio, voting advocates say.

“Unfortunately, in the state of Ohio, our GOP-led Legislature and governor’s mansion is using their political clout to roll back the hands of time,” said Turner. “My heart hurts that we are fighting the same battles that our ancestors already fought and died for.”

The current wave of restrictive voting laws in Ohio began in 2010 when an omnibus elections law bill, HB 194, was introduced in response to the spectacular breakdown of the state’s voting system, such as the extremely long lines in the 2004 presidential election.

Among provisions in the bill were some that would cut the early voting period in half (from 35 days to 16 days) and limit the hours for early voting, cutting out Sunday altogether.

“Considering how popular early voting had become in Ohio it was a little bit shocking that the Legislature wanted to reduce early voting,” said Sonia Gill, counsel, Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law’s Voting Rights Project.

Signatures were collected for a referendum to overturn the legislation, but lawmakers repealed the bill before voters could act.

Since 2012, however, the tide has changed, bringing a flurry of legislation that could reduce broad participation in the elections. This year, alone, the Ohio General Assembly has passed and Gov. John Kasich (R) has signed bills that shave days off the early voting period and completely eliminates “Golden Week,” a brief window when voters could register and vote early on the same day; prohibits anyone but Secretary of State Jon Husted from mailing unsolicited absentee ballots to voters and makes it more difficult to count provisional ballots.

Husted has also set statewide, uniform early voting hours that contain no evening or Sunday hours, making it more difficult for working Ohioans to vote early and negating “Souls to the Polls,” an initiative of the faith community to mobilize their congregations to the polls on Sundays.

Secretary Husted’s platform of “uniformity” only “sounds reasonable,” Gill said, but it’s not since different counties have different populations with different needs and local administrators would know what is best for their voters.

Furthermore, she added, the policies disproportionately impact African Americans, who utilize early voting at higher rates. For example, she cited, one study showed that African Americans in Cuyahoga County voted early at 26 times the rate of White voters, accounting for ¼ of overall voter turnout but ¾ of early in person voter turnout.

“There should have been some accounting for this being a preferential method [of voting] for this community but there was not,” Gill said.

But then, that was probably deliberate, activists say. While Republicans tout voter fraud as the justification for increasingly restrictive elections laws there is little evidence of that phenomenon, they say. Conversely, there is more evidence that such laws are designed to reduce participation by minorities, the poor and other groups that tend to vote Democrat.

“It’s politics. It’s a margins game,” Gill said. “Elections are decided by slim margins so when you manipulate the rules to create greater burdens to vote, ultimately, it’s going to reduce political participation.”

The adverse impact of these voter suppression laws is magnified by recent Supreme Court decisions that gutted Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act and made it easier for corporations to influence elections, Sen. Turner said.

The effect will be the “polluting” of American democracy with money and the suppression of the voices of poor and working-class Americans, she added.

Turner said in addition to the March bus ride, she has highlighted and fought back against the harmful policies with legislation and other advocacy, and she is also running for the position of secretary of state in this year’s mid-term elections.

She urged fellow Ohioans to take a similar stand at the polls, like they did in 2012 when lawmakers tried to enforce similarly suppressive laws.

“A lot of people in 2012 gave a protest vote,” she said. “I’m hoping people will have that same spirit in 2014.”
coldjoint
 
  -2  
Sun 20 Apr, 2014 08:46 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
Quote:
Or the immigration roundups

Those numbers are false, but Obama is signing illegals up for Obama care isn't. Bush did not sign them onto anything.

coldjoint
 
  -2  
Sun 20 Apr, 2014 08:48 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
ACORN
raprap
 
  3  
Sun 20 Apr, 2014 09:08 pm
@coldjoint,
Looky! Looky! I can do a ColdDope.

KOCHPAC

Rap
coldjoint
 
  -1  
Sun 20 Apr, 2014 09:36 pm
@raprap,
The Koch brothers are for the pipeline. The billionaire contributing to Democrats is not. And(that billionaire) profits heavily from the Indonesian coal industry.
In other words support cap and trade. Try again, nitwit.
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -1  
Sun 20 Apr, 2014 09:43 pm

Quote:
#Obamacare: you may have coverage, but just try to find a doctor
Posted by: Phineas on April 20, 2014 at 4:02 pm

**Posted by Phineas
"Obamacare has arrived"

“Obamacare has arrived”

Now that were a few months into our glorious new healthcare regime, we’re seeing more and more examples of something many predicted after the law was passed in 2010: you may have coverage, but good luck finding a doctor who takes it:

While open enrollment for coverage under the Affordable Care Act is closed, many of the newly insured are finding they can’t find doctors, landing them into a state described as “medical homelessness.”

Rotacare, a free clinic for the uninsured in Mountain View, is dealing with the problem firsthand.

Mirella Nguyen works at the clinic said staffers dutifully helped uninsured clients sign up for Obamacare so they would no longer need the free clinic.

But months later, the clinic’s former patients are coming back to the clinic begging for help. “They’re coming back to us now and saying I can’t find a doctor, “said Nguyen.

Thinn Ong was thrilled to qualify for a subsidy on the health care exchange. She is paying $200 a month in premiums. But the single mother of two is asking, what for?

“Yeah, I sign it. I got it. But where’s my doctor? Who’s my doctor? I don’t know,” said a frustrated Ong.

Nguyen said the newly insured patients checked the physicians’ lists they were provided and were told they weren’t accepting new patients or they did not participate in the plan.

And Nguyen says – while the free clinic isn’t technically supposed to be treating former patents they signed up for insurance, they can’t in good faith turn them away.

Dr. Kevin Grumbach of UCSF called the phenomenon “medical homelessness,” where patients are caught adrift in a system woefully short of primary care doctors.

(…)

Meanwhile, the sick and insured can’t get appointments.

“What good is coverage if you can’t use it?” Nguyen said.


http://sistertoldjah.com/archives/2014/04/20/obamacare-may-coverage-just-try-find-doctor/
hawkeye10
 
  0  
Sun 20 Apr, 2014 09:58 pm
@coldjoint,
Quote:
Dr. Kevin Grumbach of UCSF called the phenomenon “medical homelessness,” where patients are caught adrift in a system woefully short of primary care doctors.
Doctors and Nurses are two of the most unhappy and frustrated professions in America, adding to the workload and continuing to cut funds paid for service will not help. Big Pharma, the lawyers, the hospital owners, the device makers and the insurance companies are all going to make sure that they are paid no matter what.....it is the people on the front line who will take the abuse and cuts.

Doctors and nurses: the new flight attendants, working harder in more miserable work environments for less money.
coldjoint
 
  -1  
Sun 20 Apr, 2014 10:03 pm
@hawkeye10,
Quote:
Doctors and nurses: the new flight attendants, working harder in more miserable work environments for less money.


And according to Obama and his minions, should be loving every minute of it.
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Sun 20 Apr, 2014 10:27 pm
Quote:
Debbie Wasserman Schultz: Republicans Being “Strangled” By Tea Party “Extremists”…

I don't remember the Obama girl looking that gnarly. She is full of **** anyway.


http://weaselzippers.us/wp-content/uploads/DWS1-550x308.jpg

And Wasserman Schultz calls Republicans “extremists” for the 5,329,987th time.

http://weaselzippers.us/183459-debbie-wasserman-schultz-republicans-being-strangled-by-tea-party-extremists/
0 Replies
 
raprap
 
  4  
Mon 21 Apr, 2014 07:29 am
Hey ColdDope, do you live in Louisiana? Why do I ask? Because Louisiana GOPers sound like a special ColdDope kind of stupid.

Louisiana Republicans blame Obama for Katrina

Quote:
Writing for the Washington Post, Dana Milbank has some fun with a recent poll of Louisiana Republicans.

The question, asked by the robodialer Public Policy Polling, went: "Who[m] do you think was more responsible for the poor response to Hurricane Katrina: George W. Bush or Barack Obama?"

The response: 29 percent picked Obama, 28 percent picked Bush. One wouldn't want to make much out of Obama's one-point victory on the question, well within the margin of error. The question is why would anyone blame Obama for the federal response to a hurricane that happened in 2005 when Obama had just arrived in Washington as a freshman U.S. senator?


Rap



cicerone imposter
 
  3  
Mon 21 Apr, 2014 08:01 am
@raprap,
You want logic and rational thinkers from the GOP south? LOL Mr. Green
Advocate
 
  2  
Mon 21 Apr, 2014 09:57 am
@raprap,
raprap wrote:

Hey ColdDope, do you live in Louisiana? Why do I ask? Because Louisiana GOPers sound like a special ColdDope kind of stupid.

Louisiana Republicans blame Obama for Katrina

Quote:
Writing for the Washington Post, Dana Milbank has some fun with a recent poll of Louisiana Republicans.

The question, asked by the robodialer Public Policy Polling, went: "Who[m] do you think was more responsible for the poor response to Hurricane Katrina: George W. Bush or Barack Obama?"

The response: 29 percent picked Obama, 28 percent picked Bush. One wouldn't want to make much out of Obama's one-point victory on the question, well within the margin of error. The question is why would anyone blame Obama for the federal response to a hurricane that happened in 2005 when Obama had just arrived in Washington as a freshman U.S. senator?


Rap






Thanks for the post. It explains a lot.

From someone living in the deep South.

0 Replies
 
cicerone imposter
 
  3  
Mon 21 Apr, 2014 10:07 am
@cicerone imposter,
From politicususa.com.

Quote:
The Republicans Are Still Blaming Obama for Iraq and Afghanistan

By: Hrafnkell Haraldssonmore from Hrafnkell Haraldsson
Monday, December, 2nd, 2013, 8:07 am

President-George-W.-Bush-Mission-AccomplishedRepublicans have an unusual sense of history and again and again misdeeds and errors of the Bush administration have been attached to the Obama administration. It was bad enough they publicly planned and then shut down the federal government and blamed Obama.
Ill a deed as that was, remember how “A Third Of Louisiana Republicans Blame Obama For Hurricane Katrina Response Under Bush“? Remember when Afghanistan was called “Obama’s War”? But most disconcertingly of all, President Bill Clinton was blamed for the 9/11 attacks and how Republicans have consistently denied that any terrorist attacks took place on U.S. soil while Bush was president (Fox News’ Eric Bolling here; New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani here; Bush press secretary Dana Perino here).

Maj. Gen. Paul E. Vallely (ret.), who has already called for Barack Obama’s forced removal from office, is now blaming the president for Bush’s failed strategy in Iraq and Afghanistan. As World Net Daily relates, the fault is with Obama’s counterinsurgency doctrine (COIN):


He was a Major General?
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Mon 21 Apr, 2014 10:16 am
@raprap,

Quote:
Louisiana Republicans blame Obama for Katrina

Sorry finding a simple example of Obamas blame game is not necessary. And those are what you call low information voters. They have plenty of Democrats thinking Obama is a good president. Go figure.
raprap
 
  5  
Mon 21 Apr, 2014 10:55 am
@coldjoint,
So ColdDope is admitting to being a Louisiana Moron.

That explains a lot, ColdDope.

Rap
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Mon 21 Apr, 2014 11:00 am
@raprap,
Quote:
So ColdDope is admitting

No. But you catch on slowly. I said Obamas and the liberals blaming Bush has no comparison. It is Ripley like.
cicerone imposter
 
  4  
Mon 21 Apr, 2014 11:08 am
@coldjoint,
How is it "Ripley like?" The total reverse would be true; conservatives still believes Obama was born in Kenya, and is being blamed for Katrina.
coldjoint
 
  -3  
Mon 21 Apr, 2014 11:35 am
@cicerone imposter,
Could you turn around. I would like to see if they slapped you real hard with a postage stamp on your frequent travels
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -4  
Mon 21 Apr, 2014 11:41 am
Quote:
More Intolerance from the Gay Left Thought Police




Quote:
As I warned after the scalping of Brendan Eich (the Mozilla Guy), the Gay Left Thought Police are only getting more obnoxious. Now, they have decided that affiliating with the Boy Scouts makes you unfit for public service.

California is proposing to ban members of the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) from serving as judges because the Boy Scouts do not allow gay troop leaders, The Daily Caller has learned.

In a move with major legal implications, The California Supreme Court Advisory Committee on The Code of Judicial Ethics has proposed to classify the Boy Scouts as practicing “invidious discrimination” against gays, which would end the group’s exemption to anti-discriminatory ethics rules and would prohibit judges from being affiliated with the group.

Remember when Gay Rights Activists objected to people being punished for what they did in their private lives? Seems like ancient history.

http://www.gaypatriot.net/2014/04/21/more-intolerance-from-the-gay-left-thought-police/http://www.acidpulse.us/images/smilies/cheer.gif
Silence. No one will answer that question. Thought not speech.
0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -4  
Mon 21 Apr, 2014 12:17 pm
Quote:
Crony Socialism: Obama Gives $737 Million to Solar Firm Linked to the Pelosi Clan


They didn't learn from Solyndra.
Quote:
It’s as if Solyndra never happened. The Obama Administration is giving $737 million to a Tonopah Solar, a subsidiary of California-based SolarReserve. PCG is an investment partner with SolarReserve. Nancy Pelosi’s brother-in-law happens to be the number two man at PCG.

http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2011/09/more-crony-socialism-obama-gives-737-million-to-pelosis-brother-in-laws-solar-firm/?ModPagespeed=noscript
 

Related Topics

Obama '08? - Discussion by sozobe
Let's get rid of the Electoral College - Discussion by Robert Gentel
McCain's VP: - Discussion by Cycloptichorn
Food Stamp Turkeys - Discussion by H2O MAN
The 2008 Democrat Convention - Discussion by Lash
McCain is blowing his election chances. - Discussion by McGentrix
Snowdon is a dummy - Discussion by cicerone imposter
TEA PARTY TO AMERICA: NOW WHAT?! - Discussion by farmerman
 
Copyright © 2024 MadLab, LLC :: Terms of Service :: Privacy Policy :: Page generated in 0.19 seconds on 11/16/2024 at 10:19:49