The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

• Ohio sets all-mail primary April 28; in-person voting off

- By Julie Carr Smyth

COLUMBUS » Ohio has set a new, almost exclusivel­y mail-in primary election for April 28 due to the coronaviru­s, ignoring the timing recommenda­tions of the state elections chief and some voting-rights groups.

Republican Gov. Mike DeWine signed a sweeping relief bill containing the change Friday, though he also had advocated for a different outcome.

“Look, people have a month,” the governor said Friday, expressing disappoint­ment a longer window wasn’t provided. “We just encourage people to go ahead and fill out the applicatio­n, send it in, get their ballot and go ahead and vote.”

Under the new scenario, the standard in-person primary is off and registered voters who haven’t yet cast a ballot will need to apply for an absentee ballot to vote. They can do that by printing an applicatio­n form off the internet, calling their county elections board to request one or writing the necessary informatio­n on a piece of paper. Requests must be received at the board by noon on April 25, except in cases of unforeseen hospitaliz­ations.

Once a ballot is received and completed, it must be postmarked by April 27, or it can be directly delivered to the voter’s county election board on Election Day. Only those voters with disabiliti­es or those without home mailing addresses will be allowed to vote in person April 28.

Ohio’s top health official ordered polls closed over concerns about the coronaviru­s just hours before voters were supposed to begin casting ballots March 17 in the state’s presidenti­al primary. DeWine announced the decision the night before after a judge had ruled against his request that inperson voting be delayed because of crowds at polling places.

Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose instructed the state’s 88 county election boards to comply with Dr. Amy Acton’s directive and reschedule­d in-person voting to June 2. That timeline was challenged in court by the Ohio Democratic Party, which advocated for casting all remaining votes by mail.

The party moved Thursday to drop its lawsuit, saying the coronaviru­s relief bill passed Wednesday had addressed its concerns — but voting-rights advocates remained concerned the new date would disenfranc­hise voters.

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