Ohio’s Republican Secretary of State is up for re-election this year. Jon Husted, a Republican, spent his first term pushing a reduction in early voting. His opponent in the race, Democratic State Senator Nina Turner, has campaigned on expanding access for voters. Turner has trailed by double digits.
Among the last decisions going into the election concerned the informational posters that would be displayed at the polling places about voter ID requirements and so on. Like a lot of states, Ohio has strict rules about campaigning inside or near polling places. You’re not allowed to wear campaign badges or shirts, for instance, whether you’re an ordinary voter or a poll worker. Those informational posters ordered up by Secretary of State Husted featured his name in large print. When Democrats on the elections board in Hamilton County, Ohio, objected to that as electioneering, Husted ordered them to display the posters.
Yesterday we got a letter and some pictures from Carolyn Farmer, a precinct election officer (or PEO) in Anderson Township, a suburb of Cincinnati, in Hamilton County. She writes:
Following the lead of my fellow poll worker who says he has never seen anything like this in his 10 + years of working as an election official, I walked off my job setting up for tomorrow’s election out of disgust over the poster we were supposed to hang in our polling location.









