The vast majority of provisional ballots cast in Ohio were legitimate,
say election officials who are poring over thousands of presidential
election ballots.The ballots that are being rejected are invalid
because people simply were not registered, did not give information
such as addresses or signatures, or voted in precincts where they do
not live. "Some people thought because they had changed their mailing
address at the post office, or had changed their utilities, that they
had done everything necessary to be eligible to vote," said Nancy
Moore, deputy director of the Belmont County Board of Elections. "They
still have to change their address at the board of elections. We're not
mind readers." Of the 11 counties that have completed checking
provisional ballots, 81 percent of the ballots are valid, according to
an Associated Press survey Monday. Counties that have completed partial
tallies also said most of the provisional ballots were being counted.
Cuyahoga County, where Cleveland is located, has processed 40 percent,
or 9,719 votes, of its 24,788 provisional ballots and rejected a third,
according to a board tally. Most are being rejected because the voters
were not registered. [more]
Ohio Secretary of State Makes Last Minute Provisional Ballot Rule [more]
Unofficial Ohio presidential results provided by the Secretary of
State's Office show 155,428 provisional ballots cast. Historically,
provisional ballots are far more likely to be cast by poor and minority
voters, who live in the urban centers and move more often. Ohio has 88
counties, the vast majority of them rural. Kerry won 15 counties in
Ohio, virtually all large urban centers. In those counties, 85,096
provisional ballots remain uncounted. Past elections point to the fact
that these provisional ballots are hardly ever cast in the affluent,
primarily Republican municipalities, but are overwhelmingly from the
central city [more]