The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Chief to order polls closed

Ohio civic duty postponed: Ohio health director to overrule judge as of press time

- By Julie Carr Smyth and Dan Sewell

COLUMBUS » Ohio’s top health official will order the polls closed over concerns about the coronaviru­s, hours before voters were supposed begin casting ballots in the state’s presidenti­al primary, the governor said late Monday.

Gov. Mike DeWine announced the decision late Monday after a judge had ruled against his request that in-person voting be delayed because crowds at polling places Tuesday could put people

at unacceptab­le risk of catching and spreading the virus.

“During this time when we face an unpreceden­ted public health crisis, to conduct an election tomorrow would force poll workers and voters to place themselves at a unacceptab­le health risk of contractin­g coronaviru­s,” he said in a statement. “As such, Health Director Dr. Amy Acton will order the polls closed as a health emergency.”

He added that Secretary of State Frank LaRose would try to find a way to “extend voting options” through the courts.

Earlier, Judge Richard Frye ruled against a motion backed by DeWine and LaRose, who wanted to push in-person voting back to June 2 to avoid crowds at

polling places.

The 11th hour maneuverin­g was causing confusion: Some candidates had already brought suits aimed at keeping the election on track, but boards of elections had begun alerting poll workers they could stay home before Frye ruled.

“I’m very reluctant to undermine (state election law) and say, well, we’ll have a judge in Columbus rewrite the election code, reset the election for some arbitrary date in the future and upset the apple cart in a terrible precedent,” Frye said during a hearing on the request.

Frye suggested DeWine should have used his power to reconvene the Legislatur­e to change the law instead.

Ohio Supreme Court spokesman Ed Miller said that court was watching late Monday for a possible appeal.

“There is a lot of confusion,” said Aaron Sellers, a spokesman for the Franklin County Board of Elections in Columbus.

Neither DeWine nor LaRose, both Republican­s, has the power to postpone an election on his own under standing Ohio law.

They lamented Frye’s ruling in a statement, underscori­ng that they had acted out of concern for older voters’ health and federal guidelines that have recommende­d against gatherings of groups of 50 or more.

“The only thing more important than a free and fair election is the health and safety of Ohioans,” the statement read. “Logistical­ly, under these extraordin­ary circumstan­ces, it simply isn’t possible to hold an election tomorrow that will be considered legitimate by Ohioans. They mustn’t be forced to choose between their health and exercising their constituti­onal rights.”

State officials had also said they had been getting calls from concerned voters and poll workers.

Most people who come down with COVID-19 have relatively mild symptoms, but it can be deadly for some, especially the elderly and those with underlying health problems. Most people infected with the virus recover in a matter of weeks.

Democratic presidenti­al candidates Joe Biden, the former vice president, and U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont are competing for 136 delegates in Ohio, which also has primaries in congressio­nal and state legislativ­e races, as well as local-issue votes to be decided.

Frye praised that move, and other efforts by LaRose, during Monday’s hearing — but he said the decision ultimately sits with state lawmakers.

“I’m glad the secretary of state’s anxious about the public health of the voters, but I think he’s done everything that he thought that was appropriat­e and within his authority,” the judge said.

A Democratic candidate in a contested congressio­nal primary expressed support for the move, saying by email that public health must come first.

Kate Schroder, who is seeking the nomination to challenge 12-term Republican Rep. Steve Chabot in Ohio’s 1st Congressio­nal District, in the Cincinnati area, called it an “unexpected challenge” but “nothing compared to the importance of community safety and minimizing lives lost.”

LaRose on Sunday had issued a directive that required all 88 county boards of elections to offer a curbside

voting option Tuesday to concerned voters and to accept absentee ballots through most of Election Day.

A coalition of voting rights groups said short staffing at county boards, slow postal delivery times and the number of steps needed for a voter to request an absentee ballot were making it “all but impossible” for voters to meet the absentee ballot deadline. Absentee ballot voting has been underway for a month.

They reported that 2,603 combined absentee ballots were requested from Montgomery, Summit and Lucas counties, three of the state’s largest, and only 29 had been returned and designated countable.

A Democrat exploring a run for governor in 2022 disagreed with efforts to delay the primary, saying although he believed DeWine was acting for public health, he is concerned about calling off scheduled voting with so little notice.

“I worry that the precedent could haunt future elections by people who are not motivated by the same public good,” Cincinnati Mayor John Cranley said in an email.

Sewell reported from Cincinnati.

 ?? DORAL CHENOWETH — THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH VIA AP ?? Ohio Department of Health director Dr. Amy Acton attends a news conference about the coronaviru­s March 16 at the Ohio Statehouse. She is framed between Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine and Lt. Gov. Jon Husted.
DORAL CHENOWETH — THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH VIA AP Ohio Department of Health director Dr. Amy Acton attends a news conference about the coronaviru­s March 16 at the Ohio Statehouse. She is framed between Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine and Lt. Gov. Jon Husted.

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