Dems ask Blackwell about voting problems

Democrats on the U.S. House Judiciary Committee have asked Ohio Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell to answer for a host of voting irregularities they say occurred in Ohio Nov. 2. On Wednesday, the committee is holding a hearing, Preserving Democracy: What Went Wrong in Ohio. A spokesman for Blackwell said Friday many of the issues have already been resolved. In a letter dated Thursday, the Democrats asked Blackwell for explanations regarding 12 irregularities that have been reported in the news media or which committee staff members have identified. Among them are claims that Miami County had 19,000 more votes appear after Nov. 3, when the county had already reported what it said were 100 percent totals. Also, they has asked for Blackwell to explain why, in Butler County and elsewhere, C. Ellen Connally, an "underfunded" Democratic candidate for chief justice of the Ohio Supreme Court, received more votes than the much higher profile Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts. The Democrats also included concerns about there being too few voting machines in Democratic-leaning Franklin County neighborhoods and allegations of voting problems in Perry, Cuyahoga, Mahoning counties, and asked why Warren County officials locked down the county building where the votes were being tallied. [more]
  • Committee on the Judiciary Investigates Voting Irregularities in Ohio [more]
  • Conyers to Hold Hearings on Ohio Vote Fraud [more]
  • Final count in Ohio gives Kerry 18,000 more votes [more]
  • Kerry Won the Election by at least 1,7 Million Votes [more]
  • Now Kerry joins suit in Ohio recount [more]