What a Douchbag...........Is he afraid he is losing Military support??
In a move that could have an impact on the final result of the presidential
election, Barack Obama’s campaign has sued Ohio to block a measure which extends
early voting for members of the military.
The action brought quick
responses from Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine and as many as 15 military
groups.
DeWine told Fox News on Friday that he found the July 17 action
by Obama campaign, the Democratic National Committee and the Ohio Democratic
Party “quite shocking."
The tradition for allowing special circumstances
for military personnel in voting dates back to the civil war, he
said.
Republicans traditionally have had the lock on the military vote,
and with Ohio being a key battleground state especially this year — Obama leads
GOP challenger Mitt Romney there by only 6 points in the latest Quinnipiac
University poll — these military votes could swing the Nov. 6 election to either
candidate.
And as the Buckeye State is considered one of the key
marginals, a victory for either candidate there could end up being the
difference between taking the White House and losing it.
“I’m just
outraged by this,” DeWine told Fox on Friday. “I can’t believe that the Obama
campaign [and] the state Democratic Party are actually saying there’s no
rational basis for a distinction between someone who is in the military voting,
and somebody not in the military.
“Our whole history in this country,
we’ve made a distinction between the two, recognizing the difficulties, and the
unique situation that people in the military are in.”
The Obama campaign
sued Republicans DeWine and Secretary of State Jon Husted, contending Ohio’s
two-tiered early voting process violates the U.S. Constitution’s guarantees of
equal protection under the law.
Ohio is among 32 states that allow voters to
cast an early ballot by mail or in person without an excuse. In 2008, about 30
percent of the swing state's total vote — or roughly 1.7 million ballots — came
in ahead of Election Day.
In addition, state law allows families of armed
forces members and civilians overseas to vote through the Monday before an
election, while early voting for all other Ohioans ends the preceding Friday.
The Nov. 6 election falls on a Tuesday.
The Obama lawsuit said that the
latter part of the Ohio law is “arbitrary” with “no discernible rational basis”
— and that all voters should be able to vote on those days. The campaign seeks a
court order invalidating the statutes.
In his response, filed late on
Wednesday, DeWine noted that all Ohioans have numerous voting options, which
include casting an absentee by mail starting 35 days before the election,
casting an in-person ballot on other days, and voting at their polling location
on Election Day.
Ohio, with 18 electoral votes, has been critical to U.S.
politics, and no Republican has been elected president without a victory there.
Obama won the state in 2008 with 51.5 percent of the vote.
But remaining
ahead of his Republican opponent is proving tougher for Obama this time around.
A survey by Quinnipiac University earlier this week shows the president leading
Romney by only 6 points, 50 to 44 percent.
The military vote has
traditionally gone Republican. In 2008, Obama lost among veterans to Arizona
Sen. John McCain, a Vietnam War hero, 55 to 45 percent. Four years earlier, GOP
President George W. Bush outdistanced Massachusetts Sen. John F. Kerry, another
Vietnam veteran, among former service personnel by 57 to 41 percent.
In
addition, military members and their families generally tend to vote in higher
percentages than the general public, according to federal election
data.
The Obama for America lawsuit comes after several election-law
changes cleared Ohio’s Republican-controlled legislature and GOP Gov. John
Kasich signed them.
Before the changes, local election boards had the
discretion to set their own early, in-person voting hours on the days before the
election. People were allowed up until the day before the election to vote in
person. Weekend voting varied among the state's 88 counties.
With the
changes, most Ohioans now have until the Friday evening before the Tuesday
election to cast a ballot in person. But military voters can continue to vote in
person until Monday.
Separately, the National Guard Association of the
United States and more than a dozen other fraternal military groups asked a U.S.
judge for permission to intervene and oppose the Democrats'
lawsuit.
“Members of the U.S. Armed Forces risk their lives to keep this
nation safe and defend the fundamental constitutional right to vote,” the
military groups said in in their request.
“The Obama campaign’s and
Democratic National Committee’s argument that it is arbitrary and
unconstitutional to afford special consideration, flexibility, and
accommodations to military voters to make it easier for them to vote in person
is not only offensive, but flatly wrong as a matter of law,” the groups
said.
They’ve asked U.S. District Judge Peter Economus for permission to
join the case on the side of the state, and to oppose the Obama campaign’s
request for injunctive relief. A hearing is scheduled for Aug.
15.
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2012/08/03/Obama-administration-paves-the-way-for-sharia-law
Read more on Newsmax.com: Obama
Campaign Sues in Bid to Suppress Military Vote
Important: Do You Support
Pres. Obama's Re-Election? Vote
Here Now!
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2012/08/05/Romney-Campaign-Obama-Campaign-Lawsuit-Targeting-Military-Voters-Despicable-and-Offensive
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