U.S. Navy veteran Larry Harmon was a registered voter in Ohio, and he voted in the 2004 and 2008 election cycles. Uninspired by his choices in 2010, 2012, and 2014, Harmon sat those elections out.
What he didn’t know until 2015, however, when he tried to vote on a ballot initiative, is that his home state had un-registered him, striking his name from Ohio’s voter rolls because he hadn’t participated in a while. The Buckeye State’s Republican-led government has been especially aggressive in these voter purges in recent years, which as many observers have noted, tend to disproportionately affect minority and low-income communities.
Ohio’s practice faced a test at the U.S. Supreme Court, and in a 5-4 ruling, the court’s conservative majority sided with the state. NBC News’ Pete Williams reported:
All states have procedures for removing from their registration lists the names of people who have moved and are therefore no longer eligible to vote in a given precinct. The issue before the Supreme Court was whether a voter’s decision to sit out a certain number of elections could be the trigger for that effort.
Justice Samuel Alito, who wrote the majority opinion, said the court’s job was not “to decide whether Ohio’s supplemental process is the ideal method for keeping its voting rolls up to date. The only question before us is whether it violates federal law. It does not.”
The decision, which is online here, reversed a federal appeals court ruling that said Ohio’s practices violated the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA).









