COLUMBUS, Ohio (Statehouse News Bureau) — There’s still no fix to a problem in state law that could keep Democratic President Joe Biden off the Ohio ballot this November. A bill in each chamber of the legislature included a resolution to that issue, but neither of them made it through on Wednesday.
An elections bill from last year that was amended in a House committee Tuesday included with a provision that would ensure Biden is on the ballot this fall. The House didn’t take up that bill. And it also didn’t vote on a bill that passed the Senate Wednesday that included what Democrats call a “poison pill” – a campaign finance measure that they said would make it harder for citizens and groups to bring ballot issues to voters.
The Biden ballot issue has been discussed since Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose notified Democrats on April 5 that state law requires candidates to be certified for the ballot 90 days before an election, which would be Aug. 7. The Democratic National Convention meets 12 days after that deadline. LaRose’s letter also told Democrats the legislature needed to make a change or the convention needed to be moved by May 9.
What happened in the Senate
In what may seem to be a contradictory vote, Senate Democrats opposed the bill to change the deadline to put Biden on the ballot.
