BFF-11 Ohio orders polls closed Tuesday over virus, roiling Democratic primary

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US-POLITICS-VOTE-DEMOCRATS-OHIO

Ohio orders polls closed Tuesday over virus, roiling Democratic primary

WASHINGTON, March 17, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Ohio health officials ordered the
state’s polling stations closed for Tuesday’s Democratic primary, as the
governor defied a court ruling and declared a health emergency over
coronavirus.

“While the polls will be closed tomorrow, Secretary of State @FrankLaRose
will seek a remedy through the courts to extend voting options so that every
voter who wants to vote will be granted that opportunity” at a later date,
Governor Mike DeWine said late Monday on Twitter.

Ohio is one of four states — joining Florida, Illinois and Arizona —
scheduled to hold primaries featuring Democratic presidential nomination
frontrunner Joe Biden and his leftist rival Bernie Sanders.

Ohio’s emergency action is the sharpest example yet of how the pandemic is
upending the US political world, causing unprecedented turmoil in an election
year.

DeWine, mindful of the rapidly escalating crisis with coronavirus that has
already left about 70 people dead in the United States, called Monday for
postponement of the primary and said a lawsuit was filed in an effort to
ensure the delay.

When an Ohio court rejected the request, DeWine and his administration
stepped in and ordered the polls closed.

Holding an election under current conditions “would force poll workers and
voters to place themselves at an unacceptable health risk of contracting
coronavirus,” he said.

The decision came barely eight hours before polls were to open across the
industrial Midwestern state.

All ballots already submitted by mail or by early voting will count
whether or not the election day is switched, officials said.

Three other states voting Tuesday — Arizona, Florida and Illinois — are
set to hold their primaries as scheduled.

Louisiana recently pushed its April 4 vote to June 20, and Georgia
postponed its March 24 primary by nearly two months.

After Ohio’s call for delay, neighboring Kentucky postponed its vote by
five weeks on coronavirus fears.

“These are unprecedented times,” Kentucky Secretary of State Michael Adams
said on Twitter.

Adams, a Republican, said he and Democratic Governor Andy Beshear “agreed
to delay the primary election” until June 23.

– ‘Unnecessary’ –

President Donald Trump said Monday that Americans should avoid groups of
more than 10 people, refining suggestions by health experts to avoid
gatherings of 50 people or larger.

Trump said it was “up to the states” to decide whether to delay their
primaries, but ultimately, he said, “I think postponing is unnecessary.”

The election process “goes to the heart of what we’re all about,” Trump
told reporters.

“I hope they do it very safely,” the president added.

Tuesday’s primaries were being closely watched as an opportunity for
frontrunner Biden to consolidate his lead, while a poor showing by Sanders
could cause him to quit the race.

The states voting Tuesday use a combination of in-person voting and
absentee ballots sent by mail.

Earlier Monday, Florida, the largest state to vote Tuesday with a large
number of delegates at stake, remained on track to hold its primary.

“FL Dept of Health has assured healthy Floridians it’s safe to work the
polls for & vote in Tuesday’s election,” Florida Secretary of State Laurel
Lee tweeted.

But she stressed Sunday that voters who have been ordered to self-isolate
or who are experiencing symptoms “should not go to the polls,” but instead
get someone to bring them a vote-by-mail ballot.

In Arizona, Governor Doug Ducey said officials were taking “every
precaution necessary to protect public health on election day” and were
encouraging voters to wash their hands carefully before and after entering
polling stations.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 1000 hrs