Ohio
ideastream: Ohio Wraps Up Delayed Primary Election Under Shadow Of Coronavirus
“The situation where votes have been put into, where many have had to choose between their right to vote and their own health is one that no voter should ever be put in again,” Mike Brickner, the Ohio state director for All Voting Is Local, told ideastream.
The Columbus Dispatch: Confusion, light turnout mark in-person voting
Mike Brickner, the Ohio director of All Voting is Local, added: “What we’re seeing now is that a lot of those voters did not receive absentee ballots.” On Monday, the Ohio secretary of state’s office reported that 1.97 million Ohioans requested vote-by-mail ballots for the primary, and about 1.46 million of them had already cast ballots, leaving more than 500,000 ballots outstanding.
WKSU: Ohio’s Unusual Primary Election Is Almost Over
This election, like many things these days, is unprecedented. Ohio voters who didn’t cast ballots before March 17th were instructed to vote by mail. But Mike Brickner with All Voting is Local says his group is hearing from confused voters who didn’t get their ballots in the mail or didn’t understand the voting process. “It has been very confusing, very frustrating for voters," Brickner says.
Wall Street Journal: Biden Wins Ohio Primary More Than Two Months After State’s Voting Started
Mike Brickner, Ohio director for the voting rights group All Voting is Local, told reporters some voters had struggled to meet the deadlines because of U.S. Postal Service delays. “Voters have been very frustrated and confused by this process,” he said. “Mail is simply going too slow here in Ohio to effectively conduct an all-mail election.”
U.S. News & World Report: Democrat Mfume Retakes Maryland Congressional Seat in Special Election
Mike Brickner, Ohio state director of the group All Voting is Local, said during the call that such barriers were likely to yield historically low turnout.
ABA Journal: Voting rights for people in jail is becoming another casualty of COVID-19
Mike Brickner, the Ohio state director of All Voting Is Local, an advocacy group run by The Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights, fears that “we could end up back where we were before 2016, when few to no people in jail had a practical right to vote.”