The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Voting begins on proposed amendment

- By J. D. Davidson

Voting began July 11 on a proposed amendment that could make it more difficult for citizens to change Ohio’s constituti­on.

Early voting continues through Aug. 6 for the Aug. 8 special election the legislatur­e set after the Republican-led effort passed a 60-vote threshold by only two votes in the House. Gov. Mike DeWine recently signed included $15 million to cover the cost of the single-issue election.

That comes less than a year after lawmakers passed and DeWine signed into law a bill that banned special elections in the state.

The proposed constituti­onal amendment would require a 60% vote of the people to pass any citizen-led constituti­onal amendment. Voters would need only meet a 50%-plus-one threshold to approve the change to 60%.

If passed, the amendment will be effective immediatel­y.

Several business groups voiced their support of the potential amendment, while a coalition of Black organizati­ons is mobilizing against the proposal.

The Ohio Chamber of Commerce, the National Federation of Independen­t Business, the Ohio Restaurant Associatio­n and the Ohio Hotel & Lodging Associatio­n say the change is needed to stop amendments from passing based on short-lived public opinion.

The Ohio Coalition on Black Civic Participat­ion and the Ohio Unity Coalition called the plan an attempt by lawmakers to give more power to “no” votes rather than “yes” votes.

Citizen-led groups pushing for abortion rights and legalized recreation­al marijuana each delivered signatures to Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose last week to move a step closer to being on the November ballot.

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