The Red Brick Times

  Thursday, October 23, 2008

From a NYT article titled "Sorry, I Can't Find Your Name":
A number of states - including the battleground state of Florida - have adopted no match, no vote rules. Voters can be removed from the rolls if their names do not match a second list, such as a Social Security or driver's license database. But (like the U.S. mail) lists of this kind are notoriously mistake-filled, and one typo can cause a no match. In Ohio, Republicans recently sued the secretary of state, demanding that she provide local officials with a dubious match list. As many as 200,000 new voters could have been blocked from casting ballots. The Supreme Court rejected the suit, but Republicans are still looking for ways to use the list on Election Day......If voters find on Election Day that their names are not on the rolls, they should contact a voters' rights group like Election Protection, at 1-866-OUR-VOTE, or a political campaign, which can advocate for them. They should not, except as a last resort, cast a provisional ballot, since it is less likely to be counted.
by whatley (0) comments

       Comments:

Home