Daily Kos

WV Sec of State Willfully Disenfranchising Independents

Wed Apr 30, 2008 at 08:19:36 AM PDT

This is OUTRAGEOUS

The West Virginia Secretary of State's office and county election offices in the state are refusing to tell independent ("no party choice") voters arriving to early vote at the state's 55 voting locations that they are entitled to vote in the Democratic primary, stating that they are forbidden to do so by law.

"The Obama campaign will lose thousands of votes during early voting if this situation isn't corrected quickly," Victoria Baker, a former Republican who is an Obama supporter in Huntington, WV, said Sunday. "The Secretary of State's position is not supported by the law," according to Roy D. (Don) Baker, a West Virginia lawyer familiar with the situation. "It is wrong," he said. Mr. Baker, a Democrat, is also an Obama supporter and Ms. Baker's husband  

156,199 West Virginians are registered as independents eligible to vote in West Virginia's May 13 primary according to figures released over the weekend by the Secretary of State's office. That represents 13.2% of all registered voters in the state. These figures include voters who registered before last week's April 22nd registration deadline in the state. Early voting began April 23 and ends May 10.  

Aparently this is by choice

Gregory L. Howard, Jr., the lawyer for the Secretary of State's office, said two sections of West Virginia law, Sections 3-1-35 and 3-2-31,1 mandate the office's position. The crucial provision, he said, is a sentence which says "Political parties, through the official action of their state executive committees, shall be permitted to determine whether unaffiliated voters or voters of other parties shall be allowed to vote that party's primary election ballot upon request." Howard, a Republican, is a former member of West Virginia's House of Delegates.

West Virginia, and it's Results, are Hereby Declared IRRELEVANT

Full Press Release Below

Jeff Kisseloff is an author and journalist. His most recent book is "Generation on Fire:  Voices of Protest from the 1960s" (University Press of Kentucky, 2007).
The West Virginia Secretary of State's office and county election offices in the state are refusing to tell independent ("no party choice") voters arriving to early vote at the state's 55 voting locations that they are entitled to vote in the Democratic primary, stating that they are forbidden to do so by law.  

"The Obama campaign will lose thousands of votes during early voting if this situation isn't corrected quickly," Victoria Baker, a former Republican who is an Obama supporter in Huntington, WV, said Sunday.  "The Secretary of State's position is not supported by the law," according to Roy D. (Don) Baker, a West Virginia lawyer familiar with the situation. "It is wrong," he said. Mr. Baker, a Democrat, is also an Obama supporter and Ms. Baker's husband  

156,199 West Virginians are registered as independents eligible to vote in West Virginia's May 13 primary according to figures released over the weekend by the Secretary of State's office.  That represents 13.2% of all registered voters in the state.  These figures include voters who registered before last week's April 22nd registration deadline in the state. Early voting began April 23 and ends May 10.  

Gregory L. Howard, Jr., the lawyer for the Secretary of State's office, said two sections of West Virginia law, Sections 3-1-35 and 3-2-31,1 mandate the office's position.  The crucial provision, he said, is a sentence which says "Political parties, through the official action of their state executive committees, shall be permitted to determine whether unaffiliated voters or voters of other parties shall be allowed to vote that party's primary election ballot upon request."  Howard, a Republican, is a former member of West Virginia's House of Delegates.  

"If those sections are all they have to support their 'Don't tell, don't ask' policy, it's scandalous," Mark L. Levine, a voter protection lawyer from New York investigating the matter, said.

Howard's citation of the department's legal underpinning for the policy was made following the voter protection lawyer's request that the Secretary of State's office require election workers to deliver a slip of paper to each independent coming to vote which says, "If you want to vote in the Presidential Primary and are registered as an Independent ("No Party Choice"), you must ask for either a Republican or Democratic ballot.  "No Party Choice" (Independent) ballots do not include a choice for President."  

Levine also asked that signs with the same message be placed in the area where people come to early vote.  Both requests were denied by Jason Williams, manager of the Elections Division of the Secretary of State's office, and by Howard.  Williams said that this policy had long been in effect and could not be changed.  He referred Levine to Howard for the policy's legal basis.  

Levine made the requests late last week after learning that two West Virginians who wanted to early vote in the Democratic presidential primary voted on touch screens that listed no candidates for president since the two had registered as independents.  West Virginia law permits voters who made no party choice when they registered to vote in the primary of either the Republican or Democratic party.  

Howard said Friday that the two sections from the West Virginia code are the only legal basis for the Secretary of State's office's position and all that is necessary.  Pressed to say what in those two sections supported the office's policy, he said that it was "two words"- the "upon request" at the end of Section 3-2-31(a) (the sentence quoted above).  Howard rejected Levine's contention that nothing in either section supported the office's policy and denied his request that Ireland review the issue and change the office's position.  It is not known whether Howard or Williams have apprised Ireland of that request.  Ireland's 94-year-old mother died on Thursday and was buried Saturday.

Williams said that the state's election offices had sent mailings to independent voters telling them they must ask for a party ballot if they want to vote in the presidential primary and that they also encouraged reporters to write articles to inform independent voters.  He said those activities are not prohibited by the law but that giving the same information to independent voters at early voting and the polls is prohibited.

Two students at Marshall University (Huntington, WV), Matthew Smith and Tamara Chavies,  voted with independent ballots at the Cabell County Courthouse in Huntington before noon Wednesday morning, the first day of early voting.  Both were surprised when they learned that there was no choice for President on the ballot and that their votes had already been recorded.  Voters in WV vote on touch screens and cannot tell from looking at the screen when they start voting that the presidential candidates are not listed on a subsequent screen.  

"I don't understand how they can penalize you for not knowing how to vote when they don't tell you that you have to ask for a specific ballot," Smith said.  "I'd hate to see my vote not counted because of a technicality."  

The only race on the independent ballot was to elect two members of the Cabell County Board of Education.

Both Smith and Chavies were permitted to cast provisional ballots after they discovered their error.  Each said they voted for Obama on the provisional ballot and were told that their vote might be counted.  Under West Virginia law, provisional ballots are not opened on election night but can be opened and counted during a canvass of votes after May 13 if a county canvassing board determines, based on the circumstances surrounding each provisional ballot, that they should be.  A provisional ballot cast after a voter has already cast a valid independent ballot will not be counted, voter protection lawyers say.  A senior WV election official, speaking not for attribution, confirmed this.

Betty Ireland, a Republican, is West Virginia's secretary of  state.  She was elected in 2004 and is the first woman ever to be elected to the state's executive branch.  She announced last July that she was not seeking re-election or running for another office in 2008 because attending to the needs of her aged parents and fulfilling her duties as Secretary of State would not allow her time to plan and run a political campaign in 2008.  Both her parents are now deceased. Ireland pulled a major upset in 2004 election when she defeated former Secretary of State Ken Hechler and is a likely candidate for higher office.    

Levine said he had initially been told by a county elections officer on Thursday that the purpose of the policy was to prevent the SOS's office and election workers from "influencing elections."  "Letting a voter know that if he wants to vote for a presidential candidate - of whatever party - is not influencing an election," Levine said.  "It's the duty of the Secretary of State's office to educate voters and encourage voting, not to help disenfranchise people."  

There is no Independent party as such in West Virginia. Voters are considered independents if they do not register for any of the parties listed on the state's registration form (Republican, Democrat, Mountain and "other") or if they check "No Party Choice." West Virginia Republicans have long permitted Independents to vote in their primaries.  This is the first year that the Democratic Party has permitted it.

Tags: West Virginia, Independents, 2008 (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 21 comments

  •  Tips/Rec's (7+ / 0-)

    West Virginia is definitely 'on the payroll' and the fix is in

  •  isn't it a party decision? (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Rich in PA, shortgirl

    The government can't rule how a primary is conducted in a state that is run by a state committee.

    I think the state committee does not want indies.
    That is how I read this.

    Republicans are not a national party anymore.

    by jalapeno on Wed Apr 30, 2008 at 08:27:52 AM PDT

  •  And so it begins.................. (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    shortgirl

    "Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from a religious conviction." --Blaise Pascal

    by lyvwyr101 on Wed Apr 30, 2008 at 08:28:33 AM PDT

  •  interesting but... (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Ahianne, Losty

    I'm non-affiliated in Kanawha county.
    I called the county clerk's office to switch to Dem so I could vote in the primary, not being aware that the rule had changed.  Whoever I spoke with told me about the change and explained that all I need to do is ask for a Dem ballot.  
    I also received a mailing from the Democratic party that explaining the rule and inviting me to vote in the upcoming primary.

  •  The bar keeps changing, as Michelle (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Ahianne, paul94611

    Obama says. I guess one important remedy is make sure we have sweeping victories for Democratic secretary of state in all of our states.

    I just finishing listening to  Diane Rehm's show that discussed the supreme court's decision to allow states to enforce voters' ID law. The gist of the argument is that because the evidence is not there doesn't mean that something didn't happen.

    So, because "upon request" is deemed to be the operative words in order to have the presidential nominees on your ballot as the voter goes to vote in a presidential primary.

    How many new rules/laws will be so twisted so that only registered, truly faithful Republicans will be allowed the right to vote?

    •  It will (0+ / 0-)

      be interesting to see how many dubya justice employees get time for civil rights violations or interior employees for failure to follow the law.
      EPA employees and so many more.
      I am willing to add another couple of hundred to my tax bill so these folks can get the justice the so richly deserve.

  •  The repubs were laughing (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Rich in PA

    When that statute was enacted.

    The Dems in many states seem unable to craft legal language or to notice when the Repubs add odd language or alter where commas appear.

    If the language above is correct, then the SOS can interpret it that way and it will hold up in court... which is where it will go long after the election.

    Indies are republicans who have the capability of feeling shame at the most egregious acts of other republicans, but not enough empathy for their fellow citizens to understand the concept of "the common good".

    If you are not liberal enough to join the party, then stand back and let the Dems choose their nominee.

    HRC is the worst choice but still marginally better then McCain.

    The biggest threat to America is not communism, it's moving America toward a fascist theocracy... -- Frank Zappa

    by NCrefugee on Wed Apr 30, 2008 at 08:54:48 AM PDT

  •  whoa.. (0+ / 0-)

    That's not a good description of all independents.  I'm too liberal to join the Democratic party.

  •  Sec'y of State Betty Ireland (R-WV) (0+ / 0-)

    This reeks to high heaven.  Betty Ireland, West Virginia's Secretary of State, is a Republican who's been endorsed by anti-abortion groups.  Ireland has also pledged not to seek another term in this year's election, so she isn't going to be accountable to the voters, whatever she does in office this year.  This frees her up to help the Republicans however she wants to, and helping Hillary Clinton is the best way to accomplish that.

    This rock needs to be lifted up and have light shined under it.  Then we'll see those cockroaches scatter.

    A conservative is just a liberal who hasn't needed a second chance yet.

    by Larry McAwful on Wed Apr 30, 2008 at 09:07:07 AM PDT

  •  no matter Obama will lose big here. (0+ / 0-)

    This state is not going to vote for a black man. It has a small AA population and is made to order for Hillary. If Obama breaks 40% he will have done well.
    Anyway after next week Hillary will just be playing out the string. This contest is over, unless Hillary can dig up something on Barak that she doesn`t have now.

  •  Hardly a cosmic injustice... (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    wvhillrunner

    ...if people who aren't Democrats don't get to vote in the Democratic primary.  I know it stinks if you're a candidate whose margin over the other candidate is based upon people who aren't Democrats, but that's the way it goes.  

    I think people sometimes lose sight of what primaries are for--they are internal processes by which party affiliates choose their party's candidate to be put up for consideration of the voting public in general.  They aren't meant to be previews of the general election, with the same range of voters.  In individual states one or both major parties may have decided (foolishly in my opinion, but it's their party) that independents and even people registered in  another party can participate, but that's not the general philosophy of the party primary and I'm not going to cry in my beer over independents being "disenfranchised" from something that doesn't belong to them at all.  I'm disenfranchised from the Brazilian elections, but you don't see me posting an indignant diary about it.

    -5.38/-3.74 I've suffered for my country. Now it's your turn! --John McCain with apologies to Monty Python's "Protest Song"

    by Rich in PA on Wed Apr 30, 2008 at 09:57:03 AM PDT

    •  pretty much agree (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Rich in PA

      I was going to switch to Dem to vote in their primary for the first time in my life.  
      Independents voting in a party primary are making a deliberate decision, and something as simple as requesting which ballot you are voting shouldn't be a huge burden.
      I don't particularly like having a partisan in charge of elections, but so far I haven't seen anything too egregious from Betty Ireland's office.  She supports a paper trail for one thing, which I believe is crucial.  

      •  That's a key point you make-- (0+ / 0-)

        As I understand this diary (which is all I know of the issue), independents can still request the Dem ballot.  They just won't be told up-front that they can have one...they have to ask.  In practice this doesn't strike me as a meaningful obstacle, since no independent would go to the polls on primary day unless s/he intended to vote in a party's primary, right?  To my knowledge, independents don't have their own primaries :)

        -5.38/-3.74 I've suffered for my country. Now it's your turn! --John McCain with apologies to Monty Python's "Protest Song"

        by Rich in PA on Wed Apr 30, 2008 at 11:00:08 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        •  that is correct (0+ / 0-)

          The controversy arose when a request was made by a lawyer to give all independents a note that explained they must ask for a party ballot to vote for the party's candidates.
          That doesn't sound too unreasonable, but I also don't think not providing written instructions will result in "thousands" of lost votes (hopefully none).
          I would hope that independents would ask questions if they weren't sure how to vote.  It just doesn't seem like a conspiracy.  The county clerks office explained to me very clearly what I need to do to vote for Democrats.

  •  Has this been the norm (0+ / 0-)

    for years while Republicans allowed Ind participation? If so, then officials are being consistent.

  •  FairVote has a Secratary of State Project (0+ / 0-)

    Jennifer Brunner highlighted in SoS Spotlight

    FairVote recognized Jennifer Brunner, Ohio’s Sectary of State, in its first SoS Spotlight of the week (April 27 – May 3).

    For years, college students have had to overcome barriers to participate in the voting process. For example, many states don’t allow first time voters – college freshmen – to vote using an absentee ballot. Therefore, students could not to vote at their college or university, where they live for nine months or longer every year. The problem is that the students cannot prove they are residents of the state without the proper identification or documentation. The students’ room, electricity and other services are included in their room and board fees, so they don’t have evidence showing they live on campus.  

    Earlier this year, Jennifer Brunner, Ohio's Secretary of State, solved this problem. She ruled that colleges and universities could issue utility bills to their students. This rule allows the students to fulfill the state’s voter residency requirements. The bills reflect the services and payments covered by the students' room and board fees.

    "We think this simple move was innovative," said Tara J. Young, a Democracy SoS Fellow at FairVote.

    "Election officials should make the voting process easy and remove all barriers so more people will participate in the political process. The rule made by Secretary of State Brunner will increase participation and that is great for democracy."

    FairVote, a national non-partisan, non-profit, pro-democracy organization, believes democracy happens one vote at a time, and it is the secretaries of state and election officials who are the facilitators of democracy.

    FairVote has monitored the actions of election officials for years and this year instituted the Democracy SoS Project.  The project supports election reform and recruits coalition members to achieve fair and uniform elections at the state level. A part of the Democracy SoS Project is to highlight the good, the bad and the ugly decisions made by these officials that impact the election process.  Our spotlight is not an endorsement, but rather a highlight on policy.

    For more information about the Democracy SoS Project, call FairVote at 301.270.4616. To nominate a secretary of state, election official or election policy for the SoS Spotlight, e-mail us at sosspotlight@fairvote.org  

    ###

  •  sosspotlight@fairvote.org (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    wvhillrunner

    FairVote has a Secretary of State project. One part is to highlight the good, the bad, and the ugly policies e-mail FairVote at sosspotlight@fairvote.org with your suggestions.

Permalink | 21 comments