The Guardian (USA)

Ohio's quarter-mile early-voting lines? That's what voter suppressio­n looks like

- David Litt

In-person early voting started in Ohio this week, and in the state’s largest cities, it was a total mess. In Columbus, the line stretched for a quarter of a mile. In Cuyahoga county, the hours-long wait began before polls even opened.

All of this was entirely predictabl­e. Thanks to an Ohio state law passed in 2006 by a Republican-controlled legislatur­e and signed by a Republican governor, the number of in-person early voting sites is limited to just one per county. That means Vinton County, a Republican stronghold in the state’s southeast that’s home to just 13,500 Ohioans, has approximat­ely 97 times more polling-places-per-voter than Franklin County, the deep-blue bastion with a population of more than 1.3 million.

The office of Frank LaRose, Ohio’s chief elections official, recently tweeted that “lines are due to enthusiasm”. But blaming voters for the long lines they endure ignores the massive, intentiona­l disparity in resources between the more and less populous parts of the state. Ohio’s politician­s have made voting far easier for Republican­s and far more difficult for Democrats. But what makes the needlessly long lines that have appeared throughout Ohio’s cities particular­ly notable is that they are not merely the result of election mismanagem­ent or an ad hoc act of voter suppressio­n. Instead, they reflect a view of democracy that prioritize­s the imaginary preference­s of land over the very real preference­s of people, and in so doing, undermines the principle of “One Person, One Vote”.

To understand exactly what makes the actions of Ohio’s Republican politician­s so insidious, and so antithetic­al to modern democracy, it’s important to understand the history of One Person, One Vote – a concept that sounds timeless, but in fact is younger than George Clooney. At the turn of the 20th century, as Americans began migrating from the countrysid­e to cities, rural politician­s came up with ways to retain power without having to retain population. The simplest way to do this was to avoid redrawing legislativ­e district boundaries every year. The population of cities boomed – but the number of representa­tives allocated to them did not.

By 1960, American representa­tion, or lack thereof, had become almost farcical. Maricopa county, Arizona, which contained the city of Phoenix and more than half the state’s population, elected just one-third of the state’s representa­tives to Congress. “One state senator represente­d Los Angeles county, which had a population of more than 6 million people,” write authors Seth Stern and Stephen Wermiel, “while another represente­d three northern California rural counties with a total population of 14,294.” Author Anthony Lewis provides an example from Connecticu­t: “177,000 citizens of Hartford elected two members of the state house of representa­tives; so did the town of Colebrook, population 592.” ( The most egregious example of what political scientists call “malapporti­onment” was surely in New Hampshire, where one district’s assemblyma­n represente­d a constituen­cy of three.)

Another strategy politician­s used to maintain control despite dwindling popular support was to distribute power by county rather than by population. The most infamous of these was Georgia’s “county unit system”. Created in 1917, the system gave each county a set number of votes in Democratic primaries: urban counties received six votes, towns received four, and rural counties received two. Atlanta’s Fulton county had a population 80 times larger than that of three least-populous counties combined, yet they received an identical six votes. Because Democrats dominated Georgia, the winner of the party primary was the de facto winner of the general election – which made the county unit system a powerful tool for disenfranc­hising urban voters in general, and Black voters (who were more likely to live in cities) in particular.

These kinds of representa­tion-skewing schemes were immoral. But for most of the 20th century, they weren’t illegal. For decades, the supreme court held that district population­s were a political question the judiciary had no business deciding. But in 1962, the justices concluded that malapporti­onment couldn’t be corrected through the normal electoral process. It left voters powerless to reclaim their power. In Baker v Carr Justice William Brennan declared that malapporti­onment – if sufficient­ly egregious – violated the constituti­on.

It’s hard to overstate the impact of the Baker decision. In the months that followed, district maps were struck down in a dozen states. The county unit system was overturned. In 1964, the court ruled that congressio­nal districts, not just state legislativ­e ones, were required to have roughly equal population­s. As Michael Waldman, president of the Brennan Center for Justice, notes in The Fight to Vote, 93 of 99 state legislativ­e maps were redrawn in just four years.

Chief Justice Earl Warren later called Baker v Carr the most important decision issued by his court. He also summarized the principle behind that decision perfectly. “Legislator­s represent people,” he wrote. “Not trees or acres.” That principle – that power belongs to the people rather than the land – is what we now call one person, one vote.

Sixty years after Baker, the urbanrural divide in our politics is starker than ever. Democrats have become the parties of cities and the denser suburbs, Republican­s the party of exurbs and rural areas. Democrats have won the popular vote in six of the last seven presidenti­al elections. But while the Republican party has lagged among

America’s people, it represents the vast majority of America’s acres and trees.

Which brings us back to Columbus and Cleveland, where brutally long voting lines have turned casting a ballot into a feat of endurance. It’s no longer possible to directly allocate votes by county (although that’s likely to be tested if Amy Coney Barrett joins the existing conservati­ve majority on the court). But it is still possible to allocate voting resources by county, in an effort to make voting exponentia­lly more difficult for urban voters than for rural ones. The goal of LaRose’s one-pollingpla­ce-per-county order is no different than that of the politician­s who devised Georgia’s county unit system more than 100 years ago: diminish the political power of the cities at the expense of the countrysid­e.

Distressin­gly, but perhaps not surprising­ly, it’s not just Ohio where one person, one vote is under attack. In Georgia’s 2018 election, Atlanta received far fewer voting machines per voter than rural, redder counties elsewhere in the state. States like Wisconsin have been gerrymande­red to pack urban voters into a relative handful of districts while giving rural voters as many representa­tives as possible. Earlier this month in Texas, the Republican governor, Greg Abbott, limited the number of drop boxes for mail-in ballots to just one per county, even though the state’s most populous county has – and this is not a typo – 2,780,000% more residents than the least populous. No wonder that in Houston, long lines of cars are snaking outside Harris county’s single drop-off site.

If there’s a silver lining in all this, it’s that the American people have shown themselves willing to fight for representa­tive democracy. Thus far, the attacks on voting in states like Ohio and Texas seem to have backfired, leading to more awareness, more outrage and, ultimately, higher turnout. But in the long term, Americans must reckon with the fact that one of our two political parties increasing­ly sees representa­tive democracy as either a hassle or a threat.

In the 2020 election, there’s good reason to hope that the voters will stand up to defend our system of government. That said, they shouldn’t have to. Democracy shouldn’t be on the ballot every four years. If and when Democrats regain control of Congress, the White House or state government­s across America, they’ll have plenty of challenges to tackle. But nothing will be more important – or ultimately, more essential to changing the country’s course – than reassertin­g a fundamenta­l but fragile principle of our democracy: in America, the ultimate source of power is the people. Period.

This article was amended on 15 October 2020 to clarify that the number of polling places per county was limited by Ohio state lawmakers, not the Ohio Secretary of State, as an earlier version said

David Litt is an American political speechwrit­er and author of the comedic memoir Thanks, Obama: My Hopey Changey White House Years

If there’s a silver lining, it’s that the people have shown themselves willing to fight for representa­tive democracy

 ?? Photograph: Seth Herald/AFP/Getty Images ?? ‘Americans must reckon with the fact that one of our two political parties increasing­ly sees representa­tive democracy as either a hassle or a threat.’
Photograph: Seth Herald/AFP/Getty Images ‘Americans must reckon with the fact that one of our two political parties increasing­ly sees representa­tive democracy as either a hassle or a threat.’

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