Current:Home > ScamsVoting rights groups push for answers from Mississippi election officials about ballot shortages -Financial Clarity Guides
Voting rights groups push for answers from Mississippi election officials about ballot shortages
View
Date:2025-04-16 09:56:55
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — One month after Mississippi’s November statewide election, voting rights groups say election officials in the state’s largest county have failed to provide enough information about the problems that led to polling precincts running out of ballots.
The coalition of statewide and national civil rights organizations has requested meetings and more details about why Hinds County Election Commissioners ordered the wrong ballots, leading to shortages at several polling locations on the day the state was deciding a competitive governor’s race and a full slate of down-ballot races. Those queries have largely been met with silence, the groups said at a joint news conference Thursday.
“While we recognize and respect the commissioners have taken responsibility for the ballot shortages, Hinds County voters still have questions,” said Amir Badat, an attorney with the NAACP Legal Defense Fund.
The five Hinds County Election Commissioners did not immediately respond to emailed questions Thursday.
In Mississippi’s Nov. 7 general election, up to nine voting precincts ran out of ballots in Hinds County, home to Jackson. People waited up to two hours to vote as election officials made frantic trips to office supply stores so they could print ballots and deliver them to polling places. Voting groups and political parties filed legal papers that aimed to keep polls open later or prevent them from staying open. Multiple court orders and disputes over how to interpret them added to the confusion.
Hinds County is majority-Black and is a Democratic stronghold. It’s unclear how many people left without voting and the political affiliations of the most affected voters. Precincts in Clinton, a neighboring city home to Mississippi’s outgoing Republican House speaker, were among those affected.
The Election Day debacle has led to bipartisan backlash. Rep. Bryan Steil, a Republican from Wisconsin who chairs the congressional committee with oversight of U.S. federal elections, sent a letter obtained Wednesday by The Associated Press to the five-member Hinds County Election Commission, all Democrats. He demanded information on what steps local officials will take to prevent polling precincts from running out of ballots in future elections.
The Mississippi Center for Justice, a nonprofit legal group, submitted a public records request to the election commission and the Hinds Circuit Clerk asking for documents they said could reveal more about what caused the ballot shortages and how officials responded. The Circuit Clerk responded to the request. The Election Commission hadn’t yet done so Thursday, the group said, even though the legal deadline for a response had passed.
“We need to make sure that they fulfilled their legal obligations to those voters,” said Harya Tarekegn, the legal group’s policy director. “If not, we will use our legal tools to hold them accountable.”
The election commissioners have said they used the wrong voter data to order ballots. As a result, they did not account for the changes that went into effect after the latest round of legislative redistricting.
The voting groups’ request for a meeting with the commissioners was denied, but they urged residents to attend the commission’s monthly meeting on Dec. 12.
“Our election officials failed us in ensuring that every eligible voter had an equal and fair opportunity to cast their ballot,” said Arekia Bennett-Scott, the executive director of Mississippi Votes. “We must demand that every eligible voter has clear, unimpeded access to the very thing our belief in democracy is grounded in: the opportunity to be heard and counted.”
___
Michael Goldberg is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow him at @mikergoldberg.
veryGood! (2341)
Related
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- An ailing Pope Francis appears at a weekly audience but says he’s not well and has aide read speech
- Pope cancels trip to Dubai for UN climate conference on doctors’ orders while recovering from flu
- Woman falls 48 feet to her death down well shaft hidden below floorboards in century-old South Carolina home
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Stock market today: Asian shares mostly fall after Wall Street rallies
- Florida woman stabs boyfriend in eye with rabies needle for looking at other women: Police
- Busch Gardens sinkhole spills millions of gallons of wastewater, environmental agency says
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Taylor Swift is Spotify’s most-streamed artist of 2023, ending Bad Bunny’s 3-year reign
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- King Charles Wrote Letters to Meghan Markle About Skin Color Comments After Oprah Winfrey Interview
- X loses revenue as advertisers halt spending on platform over Elon Musk's posts
- At least 40 civilians killed by al-Qaida-linked rebels in a Burkina Faso town, UN rights office says
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Maryland roommates claim police detained them at gunpoint for no reason and shot their pet dog: No remorse
- This rabies strain was never west of the Appalachians, until a stray kitten showed up in Nebraska
- At least 40 civilians killed by al-Qaida-linked rebels in a Burkina Faso town, UN rights office says
Recommendation
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Larry Fink, photographer who contrasted social classes, dead at 82
Shannen Doherty Shares Cancer Has Spread to Her Bones
Putin accuses the West of trying to ‘dismember and plunder’ Russia in a ranting speech
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
Banker involved in big loans to Trump’s company testifies for his defense in civil fraud trial
Ryan Phillippe had 'the best' Thanksgiving weekend with youngest child Kai: See the photos
Italian migration odyssey ‘Io Capitano’ hopes to connect with viewers regardless of politics