On Thursday, U.S. District Court Judge Peter
Economus blocked the repugican cabal’s attempt to suppress the vote in
Ohio. Judge Economus ruled a law that cut early voting violates equal protection clause under the 14th
Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and it violates section 2 of the
Voting Rights Act. Aside from issuing an injunction to prevent
enforcement of this law during this year’s election, the judge ordered
Husted to open poll stations an additional Sunday.
Naturally, the repugican vote suppressor in chief
for Ohio, Jon Husted, trotted out the repugican cabal/teabagger shrieking points on the value
of treating voters uniformly in his statement reacting to the ruling.
My overarching principle for Ohio’s long-debated voting schedule is that all voters, no matter where they live, should have the same opportunity to vote. That’s why I have set uniform voting hours for all 88 counties and why I sent absentee ballot applications to voters statewide, so there would be no disparity in access.
In the same statement, Husted said he would appeal this ruling.
Of course, Jon Husted doesn’t like this ruling or
any of the court rulings that blocked his numerous attempts to suppress
the vote. He tried the same tricks in 2012.
In his effort to deliver Ohio to Mitt Romney, Husted defied court
orders and fired County Board of Election Officials who defied Husted’s
unconstitutional edicts to restrict voting hours during periods used
predominantly by African American voters in Ohio. Eventually, Husted
gave in, but as this election shows, he did not give up on his efforts
to suppress the vote.
Attorney-General Eric Holder pointed to the
significance of this ruling for court challenges to similar laws in
Texas and North Carolina. During his remarks
on the DOJ’s plan to investigate a pattern of civil rights violations
by the Ferguson Police Department, Holder commented on the ruling.
Second, in Ohio, a district court has held that the plaintiffs challenging the State of Ohio’s changes to its in-person early voting rules likely will be able to prove that those changes are unconstitutional. The Justice Department had filed a Statement of Interest in this case. And today’s outcome represents a milestone in our effort to continue to protect voting rights even after the Supreme Court’s deeply misguided decision in Shelby County.I am pleased to note that today’s decision, and the judge’s analysis, rests on some of the same legal reasoning that underlies the Department’s pending challenges to voting measures in Texas and North Carolina under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. And as we move forward, my colleagues and I will continue to do everything in our power to aggressively defend access to the ballot box and ensure that every American can exercise his or her right to participate in the democratic process, unencumbered by unnecessary restrictions that discourage, discriminate, or disenfranchise.
The repugicans are trying to confuse matters by arguing
that uniformity and equality have the same meaning. However, they
betray their own bigotry because repugicans made a special effort to
make sure that voters don’t have uniformly functioning voting machines
or uniformly convenient poll stations.
Even so, people don’t have uniform circumstances.
This means that uniformity is ultimately discriminatory against people
who don’t fit the mold under Husted’s version of uniformity. That could
be because many Americans don’t have the mythical traditional family
unit or the mythical “standard” work hours. In the real world, people
who work for a living don’t have uniform work hours nor do they have the
uniform privilege of taking time off from work so they can vote. In
that same world, people can’t afford to take time off from a job that
pays slave wages and in too many circumstances risk losing that job if
they do take time off.
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