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Ohio governor calls special session to pass legislation that would allow President Biden to vote in 2024

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio’s Republican GOP. Mike DeWine said Thursday he will call a rare special session of the General Assembly next week to pass legislation that would make him president Joe Biden is on the state’s ballot in 2024.

The special session was set for Tuesday.

“Ohio is running out of time to get Joe Biden, the sitting president of the United States, on the ballot this fall. If this does not happen, it is simply unacceptable. This is ridiculous. This is (an) absurd situation,” DeWine said.

The question of whether Biden will appear on the ballot has become entangled in a partisan legislative battle to keep foreign money out of state ballot campaigns, a year after money linked to a Swiss billionaire boosted a successful effort to enshrine abortion rights in the solid red state. constitution.

The Democratic National Convention, where Biden will be formally nominated, falls after Ohio’s August 7 voting deadline. The convention will be held in Chicago from August 19 to 22.

Since Ohio changed the certification deadline from 60 to 90 days before the general election, state lawmakers have had to adjust the requirement twice, in 2012 and 2020, to accommodate candidates from both parties. Any change was only temporary.

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This year, lawmakers were unable to come up with a solution to the May 9 limit set by Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose.

DeWine said he spoke with LaRose on Thursday and said we’re “up against a wall.” LaRose told him the deadline is next Wednesday.

‘I waited. I’ve been patient. And my patience has run out,” DeWine said.

DeWine said his proclamation will allow passage of a Senate version of the bill, which would also ban foreigners from contributing to Ohio’s voting measures.

The proposal has been described as a “poison pill” in the fractured Ohio House, where Republicans depend on Democratic votes to pass certain legislation.

In a statement, a spokesperson for Senate President Matt Huffman encouraged House leadership to allow a vote on House Bill 114.

“We agree with the governor. It is time to protect Ohio’s elections by banning foreign campaign contributions, while righting the Democratic Party’s mistake that kept Joe Biden from voting in November,” the statement said.

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DeWine spokesman Dan Tierney said after the governor spoke that a “clean” House bill that would permanently change the voting deadline could also be considered.

Ohio House Democratic Leader Allison Russo said via social platform X that money from foreign donors is already illegal and that the real problem is dirty money going to candidates.

“GOP strategy: Change the rules if you can’t win,” Russo said. “They are terrified of citizens making their voices heard in direct democracy, so now they want to completely undermine citizens’ ability to finance voting initiatives. Any talk about ‘foreign money’ is a diversion.”

Elizabeth Walters, chair of the state Democratic Party, accused Republican lawmakers of politicizing the process and disenfranchising Ohioans.

“We must pass the Ohio Anti-Corruption Act, which requires dark money groups to identify their funders, disclose their spending and strengthen the ban on foreign money,” Walters said in a statement.

“In the meantime, Republican politicians who hold supermajorities in both chambers of the state House must put politics aside and pass a clean bill to get Joe Biden on the ballot,” she continued. “Despite the Republicans’ political play, we are confident that Joe Biden will appear on the ballot in Ohio.”

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Republican U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance, who represents Ohio, said in a statement that calling a special session is a “reasonable compromise” to keep out foreign money and put the nominees of both major parties on the ballot.

Vance expressed confidence that former President Donald Trump would beat Biden regardless of whether he is on the ballot, but he said: “Many Trump voters could be stuck at home if there is no real presidential race, and that will affect our voting really harm. races for Senate and Congress. We have to play chess.”

Messages seeking comment were left with House Speaker Jason Stephens and the Biden campaign.

Alabama recently changed its law to ensure Biden will appear on the fall ballots. The Alabama bill offered the president accommodations similar to those made four years ago for then-President Donald Trump.

The last time Ohio lawmakers were sent back to Columbus in such a manner was in 2004, under Republican Gov. Bob Taft, to consider campaign finance reforms.

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