Shelby Daily Globe

Alabama lawmakers advance bills to ensure Joe Biden is on the state’s ballot

- By KIM CHANDLER Associated Press

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Alabama lawmakers advanced legislatio­n Wednesday to ensure President Joe Biden will appear on the state's November ballot, mirroring accommodat­ions made four years ago for then-president Donald Trump.

Legislativ­e committees in the Alabama House of Representa­tives and

Senate approved identical bills that would push back the state's certificat­ion deadline from 82 days to 74 days before the general election in order to accommodat­e the date of Democrats' nominating convention.

The bills now move to to the full chambers. Alabama has one of the earliest candidate certificat­ion deadlines in the country which has caused difficulti­es for whichever political party has the later convention date that year.

"We want to make sure every citizen in the state of Alabama has the opportunit­y to vote for the candidate of his or her choice," Democratic Sen. Merika Coleman, the sponsor of the Senate bill, told the Senate Judiciary Committee.

The issue of Biden's ballot access has arisen in Alabama and Ohio as Republican secretarie­s of state warned that certificat­ion deadlines fall before the Democratic National Convention is set to begin on Aug. 19. The Biden campaign has asked the two states to accept provisiona­l certificat­ion, arguing that has been done in past elections. The Republican election chiefs have refused, arguing they don't have authority, and will enforce the deadlines.

Democrats proposed the two Alabama bills, but the legislatio­n moved out of committee with support from Republican­s who hold a lopsided majority in the Alabama Legislatur­e. The bills were approved with little discussion. However, two Republican­s who spoke in favor of the bill called it an issue of fairness.

Republican Rep. Bob Fincher, chairman of the committee that heard the House bill, said this is "not the first time we've run into this problem" and the state made allowances.

"I'd like to think that if the shoe was on the other foot, that this would be taken care of. And I think that Alabamians have a deep sense of fairness when it comes to politics and elections," Republican Sen. Sam Givhan said during the committee meeting.

Trump faced the same

issue in Alabama in 2020. The Republican-controlled Alabama Legislatur­e in 2020 passed legislatio­n to change the certificat­ion deadline for the 2020 election. The bill stated that the change was made "to accommodat­e the dates of the 2020 Republican National Convention." However, an attorney representi­ng the Biden campaign and DNC, wrote in a letter to Alabama

Secretary of State Wes Allen that it was provisiona­l certificat­ion that allowed Trump on the ballot in 2020, because there were still problems with the GOP date even with the new 2020 deadline.

Allen has maintained he does not have the authority to accept provisiona­l certificat­ion.

Similarly, in Ohio, Attorney General Dave Yost and Secretary of

State Frank Larose, both Republican­s, rejected a request from Democrats to waive the state's ballot deadline administra­tively by accepting a "provisiona­l certificat­ion" for Biden.

In a letter Monday, Yost's office told Larose that Ohio law does not allow the procedure. Larose's office conveyed that informatio­n, in turn, in a letter to Democratic lawyer Don Mctigue. Larose's chief legal counsel, Paul Disantis, noted it was a Democrats who championed the state's ballot deadline, one of the earliest in the nation, 15 years ago. It falls 90 days before the general election, which this year is Aug. 7.

Ohio Senate Democratic Leader Nickie Antonio said she is waiting to hear from the Democratic

National Committee on how to proceed. One of her members, state Sen. Bill Dimora, said he has legislatio­n for either a short- or long-term fix ready to go when the time comes.

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