Ohio judge rules punch-card voting does not Deny Blacks the right to vote
Wednesday, December 22, 2004 at 11:59PM
TheSpook
Although Blacks Vote on Broken Machines that do not count their votes: Voting rights are not denied to those
who use punch-card ballots, a federal judge ruled in the nation's first
trial to challenge the system blamed for woes in Florida in the 2000
presidential election. The American Civil Liberties Union argued that
the punch-card system is error-prone and ballots are more likely to go
uncounted than votes cast in other ways. The group claimed Ohio
violated the voting rights of blacks, who predominantly live in
punch-card counties. U.S. District Judge David D. Dowd Jr. disagreed.
"All voters in a county, regardless of race, use the same voting system
to cast a ballot, and no one is denied the opportunity to cast a valid
vote because of their race," Dowd said in his ruling Tuesday. The ACLU
in Cleveland did not immediately return a call seeking comment.
Punch-card ballots are used in 69 of 88 Ohio counties, representing
nearly 73 percent of registered voters. About 92,000 ballots cast in
last month's presidential election failed to record a vote for
president, most on punch-card systems. A lawyer representing Democratic
presidential candidate John Kerry, who lost Ohio by 119,000 votes to
President Bush, has asked that representatives of the campaign be
allowed to inspect those ballots as part of a recount being done in
Ohio. In a separate action, the Rev. Jesse Jackson and attorney
Cliff Arnebeck of the Massachusetts-based Alliance for Democracy have
asked the state Supreme Court to reconsider the election results,
accusing Bush's campaign of "high-tech vote stealing." [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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