Let's start a chronicle of media attempts to influence voters or otherwise commit funny business surrounding todays events.
Oh looky, its started already.....
Ohio Papers Determined to Cover Polling Places, Despite Sec. of State's Ban
By Joe Strupp
Published: November 02, 2004 11:25 AM EDT
NEW YORK Despite a directive from the Ohio secretary of state barring reporters and photographers from polling places, some newspaper editors are urging staffers today to ignore the order and seek access to voting sites until they are ordered out.
"We are going to proceed on the assumption we will get in and will until we get thrown out," said Doug Clifton, editor of The Plain Dealer in Cleveland, who estimates that up to 50 of his newsroom staffers would be visiting polling places Tuesday in the hotly contested state. "They were getting in this morning [Tuesday], but not everywhere."
In addition, at least one paper -- The Columbus Dispatch -- has registered newsroom employees as election challengers so they gain access to polling places.
"We filed to be challengers because election officials said they would strictly enforce laws regulating who can be in polling places -- voters, poll workers and challengers only," Dispatch Editor Ben Marrison wrote in a column. "Dispatch staffers are registered as challengers for every precinct in Franklin and Delaware counties."
Marrison could not be reached for comment Tuesday morning.
The Dispatch opted for the challenger approach after Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell issued a directive on Oct. 20 to local election officials reminding them that state law prohibits anyone from entering polling places unless they are voting, monitoring the area as a challenger, or working as a voting official or witness.
The Akron Beacon Journal filed suit against Blackwell's directive, but that challenge was denied by U.S. District Judge Paul Matia on Monday. Newspaper attorneys were still discussing further appeals, but none had been filed as of Tuesday morning.
"The issue is the voter's right to privacy in the voting place," said Betty Hull, director of state advocacy for the secretary of state, who defended his actions. "He intends to fulfill his obligation to enforce the law."
Two other directives by Blackwell to bar exit pollers and registered challengers from polling places were blocked in separate court rulings within the last two days. Those court orders allowed challengers to be in the polling places and exit pollers to be within the 100-foot perimeter set by Blackwell but not inside the polling places themselves.
Carlo LoParo, Blackwell's press secretary, said the Dispatch registered staffers as challengers on behalf of a committee opposing a ballot initiative for a state constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. Despite the fact that the newspaper openly admitted the challengers would be there to act as journalists, he said the effort was considered legal. "If the committee is comfortable having individuals from the Dispatch representing them, that is within the law," LoParo said.
Some editors are instructing reporters and photographers to ignore the secretary of state's directive and get into the polling places if possible.
Mike Burbach, managing editor of the Beacon Journal, offered a plan similar to the Plain Dealer's. "We are going to try to get in, and, if they let us, we will," he said. "[Our reporters] have gotten into a couple of places so far, and we will do what we always have, show up and record the news."
But both Burbach and Doug Clifton emphasized that no reporters or photographers would disobey officials who ordered them to leave. "We will not defy the law," Burbach stressed. "But we will do what we have to within the law."
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Joe Strupp (jstrupp@editorandpublisher.com) is a senior editor at E&P.
Oh looky, its started already.....
Ohio Papers Determined to Cover Polling Places, Despite Sec. of State's Ban
By Joe Strupp
Published: November 02, 2004 11:25 AM EDT
NEW YORK Despite a directive from the Ohio secretary of state barring reporters and photographers from polling places, some newspaper editors are urging staffers today to ignore the order and seek access to voting sites until they are ordered out.
"We are going to proceed on the assumption we will get in and will until we get thrown out," said Doug Clifton, editor of The Plain Dealer in Cleveland, who estimates that up to 50 of his newsroom staffers would be visiting polling places Tuesday in the hotly contested state. "They were getting in this morning [Tuesday], but not everywhere."
In addition, at least one paper -- The Columbus Dispatch -- has registered newsroom employees as election challengers so they gain access to polling places.
"We filed to be challengers because election officials said they would strictly enforce laws regulating who can be in polling places -- voters, poll workers and challengers only," Dispatch Editor Ben Marrison wrote in a column. "Dispatch staffers are registered as challengers for every precinct in Franklin and Delaware counties."
Marrison could not be reached for comment Tuesday morning.
The Dispatch opted for the challenger approach after Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell issued a directive on Oct. 20 to local election officials reminding them that state law prohibits anyone from entering polling places unless they are voting, monitoring the area as a challenger, or working as a voting official or witness.
The Akron Beacon Journal filed suit against Blackwell's directive, but that challenge was denied by U.S. District Judge Paul Matia on Monday. Newspaper attorneys were still discussing further appeals, but none had been filed as of Tuesday morning.
"The issue is the voter's right to privacy in the voting place," said Betty Hull, director of state advocacy for the secretary of state, who defended his actions. "He intends to fulfill his obligation to enforce the law."
Two other directives by Blackwell to bar exit pollers and registered challengers from polling places were blocked in separate court rulings within the last two days. Those court orders allowed challengers to be in the polling places and exit pollers to be within the 100-foot perimeter set by Blackwell but not inside the polling places themselves.
Carlo LoParo, Blackwell's press secretary, said the Dispatch registered staffers as challengers on behalf of a committee opposing a ballot initiative for a state constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. Despite the fact that the newspaper openly admitted the challengers would be there to act as journalists, he said the effort was considered legal. "If the committee is comfortable having individuals from the Dispatch representing them, that is within the law," LoParo said.
Some editors are instructing reporters and photographers to ignore the secretary of state's directive and get into the polling places if possible.
Mike Burbach, managing editor of the Beacon Journal, offered a plan similar to the Plain Dealer's. "We are going to try to get in, and, if they let us, we will," he said. "[Our reporters] have gotten into a couple of places so far, and we will do what we always have, show up and record the news."
But both Burbach and Doug Clifton emphasized that no reporters or photographers would disobey officials who ordered them to leave. "We will not defy the law," Burbach stressed. "But we will do what we have to within the law."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Joe Strupp (jstrupp@editorandpublisher.com) is a senior editor at E&P.