Voter turned away for T-shirt
Polling irregularities mar Ohio's primary election on March 4
Matt Koesters
Issue date: 3/5/08 Section: News
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He wasn't ready to be confronted by a poll worker for his choice of clothing.
"When he came up to me, I was kind of surprised, because I had never dealt with this question while voting," said Mr. Tucker. "I could see if I was standing in line, chanting 'Obama,' but I was just standing there waiting my turn and not speaking to anyone."
Mr. Tucker said a poll worker at the Lakeknoll Drive polling location instructed him to cease campaigning and informed him he would have to remove his sweatshirt prior to being allowed to cast his ballot. Mr. Tucker said he was not campaigning and refused to take off his sweatshirt, and was eventually permitted to vote by another poll worker without having to change his attire.
According to Ohio Revised Code chapter 3501.35, no person can "solicit or in any manner attempt to influence any elector in casting the elector's vote." The language of the law is the basis for the decision to ban campaign attire from polling locations, said Kimberly Tucker, a Virginia attorney and author of 'You Can't Wear That to Vote:' The Constitutionality of State Laws Prohibiting the Wearing of Political Message Buttons.
"We have state laws that are sort of vague and open to interpretation," Ms. Tucker said. "That's the problem."
Mr. Tucker's experience is not unique. A young man in Montgomery County was asked to cover his "Barack Rocks" T-shirt before being permitted to vote, according to a Dayton Daily News report.
"We're not trying to stifle anyone's freedom of speech," Steve Harsman, director of the Montgomery County Board of Elections told The Dayton Daily News. "But you just can't do any campaigning inside a polling place."
However, the rule was not enforced at all polling locations in the area. Several employees of The News Record were permitted to vote at multiple polling locations in both Hamilton and Butler counties while wearing buttons with political language. None were confronted or denied access to the polls.


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