Despite debates, deceptions, and divisions, Mitt Romney is still having a hard time catching up in Ohio. While this morning’s new NBC News/Wall Street Journal/Marist poll shows the Republican presidential nominee keeping it airtight in Florida and surging to a slim lead in Virginia, Ohio remains a stronghold of Obama support. The President leads by six points there, a bit of a slimmer lead than before, but still very strong — especially since my fellow Buckeyes have been able to vote since October 2.
Another thing we’re seeing in Ohio? The Republican Secretary of State taking a series of L’s on his efforts to restrict early voting. He’s to the point now where he’s appealing to the Supreme Court to reverse a court ruling keeping the polls open all the way through Election Day, whereas he wants to bar people from voting on the last three days beforehand.
As Trymaine Lee noted in the Huffington Post, that action alone is confusing matters:
Local election officials said they don’t know how to inform their poll workers or voters. Ministers have stalled their Souls to the Polls campaigns. And Husted has raised the ante in the latest round between the state’s Democrats and Republicans over expanding or limiting voter access. “The problem is we have no clue what’s going on,” said Tim Burke, a Democrat and chairman of the Hamilton County Board of Elections in Cincinnati. “I am absolutely convinced that this is part of an overall strategy.”
We don’t know if a crop of alarmist billboards warning against committing voter fraud have erected in black and Latino neighborhoods around Cleveland, Ohio are a formal part of that strategy, but local politicians and civil-rights groups believe that’s the goal of whoever is paying for them. According to a map created by Eric Fischer (see below the jump), there are currently 10 billboards standing, a majority of which are prominently featured at the corner major intersections. Clear Channel, who was paid to display the ads, has declined to disclose who paid for them.
The only indication of authorship exists in a corner in fine print: “Paid for by a private family foundation.”








