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Republicans in the Ohio General Assembly want a constitutional amendment on the May 2023 primary ballot that would require a 60% vote for passage of citizen-initiated constitutional amendments. And Frank LaRose is their mouthpiece.
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Secretary of State Frank LaRose, Ohio's chief elections officer, wants to amend the state constitution to require constitutional amendments brought by petition initiatives to garner 60% of the vote to be approved. Voting rights advocates and conservative groups alike are crying foul.
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The proposal requiring a 60% majority for a constitutional amendment would only apply to citizen-led ballot initiatives, and not to legislature-led amendments.
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Two years ago, the Greene County village of Yellow Springs voted to allow its 27 non-citizen residents to vote in local elections. But Issue 2 on the November ballot could take away their power to do that.
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Terpsehore “Tore” Maras, a pro-Trump podcaster, has promoted the lie that the 2020 presidential election was stolen. An affidavit that Maras wrote was included in a 2020 case filed by Trump lawyer Sidney Powell that claimed Dominion Voting machines shifted votes to President Joe Biden.
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The former president endorsed Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose ahead of Ohio's Tuesday primaries. LaRose told NPR in January that candidates not conceding was a "really dangerous thing."
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Because there are no valid maps for state legislative districts, those races won't appear on the ballot unless a federal court gets involved almost immediately.
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Chelsea Clark, a Forest Park council member who grew up on an Allen County farm, is the only Democrat willing to take on Republican incumbent Frank LaRose for Ohio Secretary of State.
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The court challenge is playing out as elections officials plan for May primary.
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Ohio’s top elections official has asked the state’s attorney general to investigate 117 people who either registered to vote in Ohio or actually cast a...