county election board

Blue Ohio: Questions Regarding Strickland's Residency Dropped!

Posted 10/26/06 at 4:58pm by jamie

Last week the hot talk was how Ted Strickland could be ineligible to vote because of residency problems. The complaint was voted on by the county election board and the vote ended in a tie right along party lines. That forced the decision to be sent up to the Secretary of State's office for a final decision, which in turn was sent back to the county level because they never even investigated the claims.

Now after all that, it appears the issue has died:

The flap over where Democratic candidate for governor Ted Strickland lives ended Wednesday when a board of elections decided to no longer pursue the matter, Strickland's campaign said.

The northeast Ohio woman who filed a challenge of Strickland's eligibility to vote asked Tuesday to have the complaint dismissed. The Columbiana County Board of Elections received a letter from a lawyer for Jacquelyn Long.

The board met Wednesday and decided to drop the case, Strickland campaign spokesman Keith Dailey said. A message was left for county elections director Lois Gall.

"We're happy that the right decision was finally made," Dailey said.

A recent court decision in Strickland's favor played into Long's decision to pull the complaint but was among many circumstances she considered, her lawyer said.

20 Days To Go - Great News For Blue Ohio!

Posted 10/18/06 at 2:30pm by jamie

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Strickland keeps moving out in front of Blackwell, now with his biggest margin yet:

Democrat Ted Strickland has a nearly 2-1 lead over Republican Ken Blackwell with three weeks left in the race for governor, a poll released Wednesday shows.

The Quinnipiac University poll found 59 percent of likely Ohio voters favored Strickland, a Methodist minister and six-term congressman, while 32 percent backed Blackwell, Ohio's conservative secretary of state and a favorite of the religious right.

The attempt to prevent Strickland from voting this year has also hit a road bump. The Assistant Secretary of State returned the complaint to the county election board. It turns out the board didn't even investigate the claim and instead just voted.

Yesterday, the New York Times published an editorial about Strickland's residency questions. The New York Times put a darker slant to the story, saying the Blackwell could decide if Strickland was eligible to run:

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.

(H/T Nicole)

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