Ohio GOP sues over voter ID discrepancies
By Associated Press
Tuesday, October 7, 2008 - Added 1d 9h ago


COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Ohio Republican Party’s latest legal action asking for more safeguards against possible voter fraud is overblown and an attempt to inject fear into the voting process, the state’s elections chief said.

The GOP has asked a federal judge to force Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner to match voter registration information, such as a driver’s license number, against information in the state Bureau of Motor Vehicles database.

Republicans then want any mismatches to be provided to the party and to county elections officials, who would then be required to investigate the discrepancy.

The GOP filed the complaint Sunday as an extension of a previous action against a weeklong period in which Ohioans could register and vote on the same day.

"I don’t know when it became vogue to put fear into the voting process, except if you don’t want people to vote," Brunner, a Democrat, said. Her office must respond to the complaint by Wednesday.

Republicans said there’s no process to make sure voters aren’t casting ballots using false registration information. In the complaint, the party cites unverified reports of individuals coming from out-of-state to cast ballots during early voting.

Brunner’s office said that in cases where people registered and then immediately voted, the registration information was fed into a database that will decide whether an address is valid.

Brunner said there have been only a handful of documented cases of actual voter fraud in Ohio, and that other safeguards are in place to catch fraud in the state’s bipartisan system.

When registering, voters must provide name, address, date of birth, and either their driver’s license number or the last four digits of their Social Security number.

Brunner said the state already matches registration information against data in the Bureau of Motor Vehicles system, as well as the Social Security database. She said federal law provides no requirements of what to do once a mismatch is discovered. It is up to counties to check the system for flagged registrations, and then investigate if warranted.

In its complaint, the GOP asked U.S. District Court Judge George Smith to require Brunner to check all registrations that came in either on or after Jan. 1, 2008, something Brunner’s office says the database has been doing almost instantaneously with all new registrations.





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