A Big Victory for Voting Rights in Ohio

Posted in Featured, Nieuws, Nuus

indeks

During the 2004 verkiesing, Ohio had the longest lines to vote in the country, with five-hour waits in heavily Democratic cities like Cleveland and Columbus. A post-election report for the DNC estimated that 3 percent of Ohioans—174,000 people—left their polling places without voting, a larger number than George W. Bush’s 118,000 vote margin of victory in the Buckeye State.

“The Election Day experience for most African American voters was starkly different from that of most white voters in Ohio,” the pollsters Cornell Belcher and Diane Feldman found. African Americans waited an average of 52 minutes to vote, while the wait for white voters was only 18 minute. Twice as many black voters reported experiencing problems at the polls.

Lees meer: TheNation.com

Deel hierdie artikel

No Comments

Antwoorde A Big Victory for Voting Rights in Ohio is nou gesluit.