The man who has stoked fear about impostors at the polls.
by Jane Mayer
October 29, 2012
Teresa Sharp is fifty-three years old and has lived
in a modest single-family house on Millsdale Street, in a suburb of
Cincinnati, for nearly thirty-three years. A lifelong Democrat, she has
voted in every Presidential election since she turned eighteen. So she
was agitated when an official summons from the Hamilton County Board of
Elections arrived in the mail last month. Hamilton County, which
includes Cincinnati, is one of the most populous regions of the most
fiercely contested state in the 2012 election. No Republican candidate
has ever won the Presidency without carrying Ohio, and recent polls show
Barack Obama and Mitt Romney almost even in the state. Every vote may
matter, including those cast by the seven members of the Sharp
family—Teresa, her husband, four grown children, and an elderly
aunt—living in the Millsdale Street house.
The letter, which
cited arcane legal statutes and was printed on government letterhead,
was dated September 4th. “You are hereby notified that your right to
vote has been challenged by a qualified elector,” it said. “The Hamilton
County Board of Elections has scheduled a hearing regarding your right
to vote on Monday, September 10th, 2012, at 8:30
A.
M. . . . You have the right to appear and testify, call witnesses and be represented by counsel.”
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