Victory for plaintiffs in voting rights suit/Third party ads controversy in Blackwell race
By Sibley Arnebeck
Posted on Fri Sep 08, 2006 at 05:26:32 PM EST
Another victory in support of free and fair elections for Ohio voters! U.S. District Court Judge Algenon Marbley ordered Ohio county boards of elections to preserve the ballots of the 2004 election to be saved until further notice. Is the tide beginning to turn in Ohio? Let's hope so. However, voters still face the huge hurdle of HB 3's new voter ID requirements, which are so confusing and detrimental to the voting process as to be considered a voter suppression strategy by critics. With two positive court decisions in favor of the public interest, there is a renewed interest in possibly litigating these draconian ID requirements.
More drama surrounding Blackwell's campaign for governor, and the third party ads in support of his candidacy appeared today. Democrats have brought an action in the state Supreme Court asking that the group sponsoring the ads, Common Sense 2006, be required to disclose its backers, "a case reminiscent of a 2000 battle over ads against one of Ohio's justices." Common Cause/OH and The Alliance for Democracy brought that suit, which after being litigated for five years in every court, state and federal, finally got a favorable ruling, that the group sponsoring the ads was a PAC, and corporate contributors had to be disclosed.
In this case, it is alleged that the third-party group received $1.5 million in donations from another group call Common Sense Ohio. The group claims that the sources of that money are protected by their nonprofit status. Sounds a lot like Common Cause/Ohio and the Alliance's 2000 case against Citizens for a Strong Ohio. They are even using the same lawyer, William Todd, whose main argument in that case and again today is that the ads are legal because they are "issue ads." He lost that argument before. Perhaps he should use some of that "common sense," and see he could possibly lose it again, unless of course, he is counting on the Republican dominated supreme court which he helped put into office through his protracted litigation. Maybe it is not common sense we are dealing with but a cunning strategy financed through a well-spring of illegal corporate money which has become so damaging to our democratic process.
Tags: 2004 ballots, Blackwell, voter ID requirements, HB 3, voting rights, issue ads (all tags)
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