Ohio’s Blackwell may try to remove his opponent from the ballot

It’s fairly absurd that Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell (R) is running for governor while serving in a position that allows him to make decisions as to who can vote in the gubernatorial race. He should have handed over those responsibilities months ago, but instead he issued absurd rules intended to curb voter-registration drives.

But the idea that Blackwell can also help decide whether his opponent, who is beating him badly, stays on the ballot, is truly painful. (thanks to reader G.D. for the tip)

Voters in Ohio can be forgiven if they feel they have been beamed out of the Midwest and dropped into a third-world autocracy. The latest news from the state’s governor’s race is that the Republican nominee, Kenneth Blackwell, who is also the Ohio secretary of state, could rule that his opponent is ineligible to run because of a technicality. We’d like to think that his office would not ultimately do that, or that if it did, such a ruling would not be allowed to stand. But the mere fact that an elected official and political candidate has the authority to toss his opponent out of a race is further evidence of a serious flaw in our democracy.

Indeed, it is. In this case, Rep. Ted Strickland (D) has two homes in Ohio, an apartment where he’s registered to vote, and a condominium elsewhere in the same state. Blackwell’s supporters argue that Strickland actually lives in the condo, which suggests he doesn’t reside at the home where he’s registered, which suggests he’s not a qualified voter, which suggests he’s prohibited from running for governor.

It’s hardly the kind of complaint to be taken seriously. As the NYT noted today, state election law “gives voters with multiple homes broad discretion in choosing among them.” This is little more than a silly right-wing stunt intended to interrupt a campaign in which the very far-right candidate is poised to lose in a landslide.

But instead of dismissing this nonsense out of hand, Ohio Republicans are taking the complaint seriously.

The county board that heard it broke down 2 to 2, on party lines, about whether to hold a hearing. In the case of a tie vote at the county level, complaints like these get forwarded to the secretary of state’s office to be resolved. Mr. Blackwell says he has designated his assistant secretary to handle duties that could conflict with his candidacy. But passing these matters on to a subordinate who is a political ally and owes his job to the candidate hardly removes the conflict.

Election administration should be removed from partisan politics, in Ohio and everywhere else. Decisions like these should be made by nonpartisan bodies or, failing that, by people who do their utmost to insulate themselves from partisan politics. In 2004, Mr. Blackwell chose to become co-chairman of President Bush’s Ohio campaign, and then issued rulings that helped the campaign. Now we have the even more bizarre prospect of Mr. Blackwell, or his deputy, potentially participating in the baseless disqualification of his opponent.

We are confident it will not come to that. But however this particular case is resolved, it underscores the need for Ohio, and other states, to find a way to administer elections that is insulated from partisan politics.

If Dems take back Congress, can we please put election reform right up there near the top of the domestic policy agenda?

Civil War in Ohio.

And I do mean with guns and things.

  • Why would they be confident that it would not come to that?

    Why doesn’t the media realize that there is NOTHING that republicans will not do to attain or retain power.

  • This would really make a fascinating case study on what it would take (assuming anything would ever suffice) to get Americans calling mass strikes, boycotting and protesting in the streets, blocking government buildings, all of the things that citizens in other countries have done when dictators have failed or elections have been stolen. Would the 50+ percent of Ohioans who favor Strickland fill the streets to demand justice and democracy, or would they shrug, say “politics as usual,” and go back to watching the baseball playoffs?

  • Zeitgeist,

    It wouldn’t be the baseball playoffs. It would be the Buckeyes run to the national championship game.

  • And I do mean with guns and things.

    Maybe, but it’s not something to look forward to. Their side probably has a 50-1 edge in weapons. We’re seriously outgunned, and hundreds of thousands of right-wing extremists have been training for just such a conflict for decades.

  • Kind of ham-handed of Blackwell.

    The other day, for the first time, I saw the movie “I Married a Witch” , which has Veronica Lake magically altering ballots to elect her love interest. These days, we have Diebold. We don’t need Veronica Lake.

  • Wow! That’s simply breathtaking in it’s audacity and transparency. How Blackwell intends to govern the state after such a naked power grab is beyond me. I guess Strickland’s lead was so insurmountable even Diebold couldn’t throw the election.

  • DO NOT PUT IT PAST BLACKWELL…..seriously…I hate Republicans I really do….I rarely use such a strong word as hate…but their whiny self serving petulent behavior has become so disgusting I cant take it anymore……

    Strickland should take the gloves off when it comes to Blackwell……with the skeletons in his closet I am sure it would be easy enough to put him in his place…

  • Meanwhile, back in the 15th circle of Hell, Karl Rove wipes the remains of a brimstone and baby liver sandwich from his chins with elegantly manicured talons and purrs:

    “Yess, yess, my faithful minion. You shall be rewarded with the flesh of 666 virgins. Mwahahaha!”

  • The issue isn’t Ohio, or whether Strickland voters will watch the Buckeyes or not…

    There is an ENDEMIC problem in how elections are conducted across the country. America needs a British style non-partisan “Electoral Commission” to conduct elections, and we need it YESTERDAY. It’s a simple, simple solution.

    Also, why is it that the rest of the world can do electronic voting without suspiscion of fraud? Not because of “paper trails”…

    It’s because PUBLIC entities write open source software for the voting machines, not DIEBOLD. The key is Public vs Private, and it’s a simple, simple solution.

    We can learn a lot from the rest of the world, we just need to open our eyes a little.

  • Scott,

    We really do need the lovely (and lovely sounding) Veronica Lake, especially as a good witch brought back by the power of love. Sadly but more, we need to put Blackwell back into his bottle over the mantle.

    JC

  • If Blackwell wasn’t in politics, he’d be locked up somewhere as a criminal… hopefully, he’ll still have that opportunity.

  • The Ohio ‘Pugs are already trying this against a Democratic congressional candidate. No reason J. Ken wouldn’t try it against Strickland.

  • If true, this is frightning. Where is the MSM on this one? Blakwell truely belongs in jail for election fraud for his antics in ’04, but this is over the top. Talk about civil rights violations? What a jerk! This can’t stand and I doubt that it will.

  • If Dems take back Congress, can we please put election reform right up there near the top of the domestic policy agenda?

    Hear, hear!

    But let’s do that even if we fail to take back congress. Diebold and other election frauds have to GOT to become priority ONE if we want any of our other issues to be addressed. Who knows how many elections we’ve lost because of this BS?

    Election reform is not just another issue, it’s THE issue that matters more than all others combined. Right now we have no idea if MILLIONS of our votes are being properly counted, and until we can be sure our elections are legit, I say EVERYTHING else should be secondary.

  • Yes the general issue, the one that is most important in the long run, is, as Ohioan puts it, “an ENDEMIC problem in how elections are conducted across the country.” But I don’t think we can afford to take the attitude that any blatant move by Blackwell’s office to steel the election is simply only one more manifestation of a corrupt electoral system in need of a total overhaul. How people respond to any possible action by Blackwell is also an important issue, for failure to challenge this move as agressively as possible will only encourage further audacious behavior by Blackwell and others.

  • It should be clear by now that these “conflicts of interest”–I’d prefer a more striking term–will only be addressed if and when a Democrat tries the same kind of despicable, profoundly un-American tactics that monsters like Kitty Harris and Blackwell have gleefully indulged for many years.

    I’m with Zeitgeist in comment #3. If this goes through and doesn’t inspire mass action, we really should stop insulting the word “democracy” by calling ourselves such.

  • ***Civil War in Ohio. And I do mean with guns and things.***
    ———–Lance

    If “the Event” should come to pass, Lance, then know that Democracy will not simply “lie down and die with a whimper” in Ohio. Blackwell thinks that it will—but from everything I’m seeing in NE Ohio, a fair portion of “conservative extremist” factions will support Strickland, as opposed to the tyrannical potentialities of a “governor blackwell….”*

    *Note—lower-case “g/b” employed for demeaning political effect….

  • Isn’t this the same Republican party that tried to convince us all back in 2000 that Dick Cheney was really a resident of Wyoming?

  • @ 21 DDD

    Yep, also the same party that leapt all over H. Clinton for running in NY but had no problem turning around and sticking Alan “Fruit Bat” Keyes (Maryland) in the Illinois race.

  • Thank goodness this is National Waterboard Week ™ ! Maybe we could invite Blackwell to be a home contestant in this new and exciting Republican game.

  • Ken Blackwell is a conscientious public official. If Strickland’s candidacy is invalid, then he is duty-bound to disqualify him.

  • Jason, if you really believe that, either you need to start taking your meds again, or you need to quit doing the drugs you’re on right now! Since Strickland is OBVIOUSLY a legal resident of Ohio, and only votes in the district where he is registered (not violating 1 man 1 vote), then there should be (and, in fact is) NO problem with his candidacy. This is a cheap trick designed to cast doubt where in fact there is none.
    Wake up and smell the coffee. You are a tool of the Republikommunist criminals.

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