There has been much in the news about the train derailment and chemical burn in East Palestine, Ohio. Most of the news is condemnation of the Biden administration for not offering more help and support for the people who were nuked. Today, Donald Trump and his son Don Junior went to East Palestine to visit with the people, provide meals for the all the first responders, and to take lots of bottled water into the city.
Many
people suspect that Joe Biden has not been to Ohio because the people in East Palestine
voted for Trump. There may or may not be any truth in the statement, but
legislation in the Ohio General Assembly shows that the members there are
serious about election security. Jack Fitzhenry at The Daily Signal reported
the following:
Republicans in the Ohio General Assembly
closed out 2022 by passing an election reform bill covering photo ID requirements,
ballot drop boxes, and mail-in ballots.
In January, Gov. Mike DeWine, a
Republican, signed the bill into law. The result is a substantial improvement
to the reliability of the state’s elections as measured by The Heritage
Foundation’s Election Integrity Scorecard….
The new law improved Ohio’s score by 10
points over its 2022 total, equaling the single largest improvement by any
state during the 2022 legislative cycle. Ohio now earns a total score of 76 out
of 100, vaulting the state upward in the rankings from 17th to a tie
for ninth with Texas.
Fitzhenry
continued his article with an explanation of the particulars of the new law.
The central focus of the reform was on photo IDs. “All Ohio voters casting
their ballots in person must now provide a government-issued photo ID at their
polling place.” This is an excellent first step because it allows poll workers
to identify every potential voter and to give ballots only to eligible voters.
Those
voters who prefer to vote by mail will now “be subject to the same voter-verification
standards as in-person voting. “Applicants for an absentee ballot must include
a copy of their government-issued photo identification with their application
to receive a mail-in ballot, along with other unique identifying information,
such as the last four digits of the voter’s Social Security number.”
The
government-issued photo ID requirement is a higher standard than previous laws
that allowed “several forms of non-photo IDS when applying to vote by mail, including
utility bills and bank statements, which can be fabricated by anyone with a
computer.”
I
congratulate Ohio on requiring government-issued photo ID for the opportunity
to vote. We live in a day where photo IDs are required in almost everything that
we do: apply for Social Security, receive medical help, travel on airplanes,
open a bank account. Anyone who suggests that requiring a photo ID to vote is
voter suppression is grasping at straws. Recent changes in voter laws in Georgia
show that the numbers of voters increased once election integrity was improved.
Government-issued
photo ID requirements to vote will cause few problems in Ohio. “As Ohio
Secretary of State Frank LaRose explained, ‘About 98% of Ohioans were already
using either their driver license or state-issued photo ID care to vote in the
2022 election.”
Ohio’s
election reform law was to ensure that the remaining 2% did not swing a close
election. To make it easier for residents to obtain the photo IDs, the law
provides for anyone age 17 years or older to receive a free government-issued
photo ID. For noncitizens, the ID has a separate notation.
To
balance election security with ample voting opportunities, the new law in Ohio
codifies the use of ballot drop boxes.
Ohio’s law demonstrates the practical
measures states can adopt to minimize the risk of drop boxes becoming a weak
link in the chain of ballot custody.
The law dictates that drop boxes must be
limited to one per county, placed on county board of elections property, and
kept under constant video surveillance. The law further provides that ballots
shall be collected form the box at least once
day, but only by a bipartisan team of election officials, who must report
the number of ballots collected each business day.
Fitzhenry
noted that Ohio’s new law has a weak link. It enables “the secretary of state
to mail unsolicited absentee-ballot applications.”
Mail-in ballots remain more vulnerable to
fraud and manipulation than in-person voting at a designated polling place
since they are the only type of ballot that is voted outside the supervision of
election officials and outside the observation of poll watchers.
While they should be made available to
voters who will be unable to vote in person on Election Day or during any
early-voting period because they are disabled or for other valid reasons, Ohio
should not be pushing even more voters toward mail-in voting.
Despite
his cautions about mail-in voting, Fitzhenry gave credit to Ohio’s Legislature,
governor, and secretary of state. “They knew that even modest reforms would
prompt unfair criticism of their motives. But their achievement, a more secure
election process, will long outlast the criticism.”
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