The Commercial Appeal

Dems’ plan to get Biden on Ohio ballot rejected

- Haley Bemiller

COLUMBUS, Ohio – State officials in Ohio rejected a plan from Democrats to get President Joe Biden on the November ballot after the party scheduled its convention past a state election deadline.

Ohio Secretary of State Frank Larose warned state Democrats earlier this month that Biden is at risk of not making the Nov. 5 ballot. State law requires officials to certify the ballot 90 days before an election.

That’s Aug. 7 this year, but the president won’t officially be nominated until the Democratic National Convention on Aug. 19.

In a letter to Larose’s office, obtained by the USA TODAY NETWORK Ohio bureau, attorney Don Mctigue said the Democratic Party would provisiona­lly certify Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris ahead of the Aug. 7 deadline. Mctigue noted that Biden has already secured enough delegates for the Democratic nomination after facing no significan­t primary challenge.

Biden easily won Ohio’s presidenti­al primary with 87% of the vote.

“If President Biden and Vice President Harris are not listed on the ballot as the Democratic Party candidates, their supporters in Ohio will be stripped of the opportunit­y to associate with their preferred candidate,” Mctigue wrote.

But Attorney General Dave Yost’s office says provisiona­l approval won’t work, nor can Larose unilateral­ly change election deadlines.

“Instead, the law mandates the Democratic Party to actually certify its president and vice-president candidates on or before August 7, 2024,” Julie M. Pfeiffer, an attorney on Yost’s staff, told Larose’s legal counsel. “No alternativ­e process is permitted.”

Pfeiffer’s letter appears to leave Democrats with two options: Rely on the state’s legislatur­e or sue.

Lawmakers could pass an exemption to the 90-day deadline by May 9, as they did in 2020 when both parties scheduled their convention­s too late. But the chances of that are slim: Top Democrats said they’re deferring to the Biden campaign and Democratic National Committee, and Republican leaders are unlikely to lend a helping hand.

“I think it’s a Democratic problem,” state Senate President Matt Huffman, R-lima, told reporters last week. “There should have to be a Democratic solution. That hasn’t been proposed to me.”

Ohio isn’t the only state with election deadlines before the convention. Alabama and Washington are in the same boat, although Washington’s secretary of state, a Democrat, will accept a provisiona­l certificat­ion, the Seattle Times reported.

Oklahoma, Illinois, Washington and Montana did the same with both parties in 2020.

Mctigue and a spokespers­on for Biden’s campaign declined to answer questions about potential next steps.

“Joe Biden will be on the ballot in all 50 states,” a Biden campaign official said. “State officials have the ability to grant provisiona­l ballot access certificat­ion prior to the conclusion of presidenti­al nominating convention­s.”

 ?? ANNA MONEYMAKER/GETTY IMAGES FILE ?? President Joe Biden easily won Ohio’s presidenti­al primary but has run into an issue with the timing of the Democratic National Convention to officially make the ballot in Ohio.
ANNA MONEYMAKER/GETTY IMAGES FILE President Joe Biden easily won Ohio’s presidenti­al primary but has run into an issue with the timing of the Democratic National Convention to officially make the ballot in Ohio.

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