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Reynolds: We’ve waited long enough to fix voting process

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In the exhilaration of his victorious moment, newly re-crowned President Barack Obama cheered not only those who voted for the first time, but also those “who waited in lines for a very long time.” And to loud cheers he added: “By the way, we have to fix that.”

I hope the president indeed will correct this system of long lines that rolled on for miles and hours, because the voting infrastructure is a national disgrace that can rob thousands, especially the elderly, of the right to vote.

To some, long voting lines extol the hallmark of effusive democracy; after all, we vote rather than flood the streets with tanks. No argument there, but voters still deserve better. Too many voters are paying a “wait tax,” where voters – often disproportionately black or Latino – are forced to wait in lines so long it is difficult not to give up and not vote.

All too often, those long lines are not flaws but intentionally created infrastructure. For example, the number of voting machines in Democratic-leaning districts in key Ohio counties was reduced between 2000 and 2004, despite a sharp rise in registered voters.

In Franklin County, which includes my home town of Columbus, Ohio, 65 of its 146 Democratic-leaning wards had fewer voting machines, while 45 of the GOP-leaning wards had more, according to the Huffington Post. This occurred within the county’s Democratic wards despite a 25 percent increase in registered voters there.

In 2008, the flawed system plagued my father. He lived in a heavily Democratic-leaning section of Columbus and was ecstatic about voting for a black man, his party nominee. It was a cold, wintery voting day, and my father, fresh from a knee replacement, arrived early to vote but could not brave the four-hour wait at the polling place.

The decision really hurt him, especially when he heard reports that voting was swift and uncomplicated in the white, suburbanite areas.

My father died in July 2010 and of course did not realize his desire to vote for Obama. As I stood in line at a Prince George’s County, Md., polling place Tuesday, I felt the pain of the hour-long wait almost unbearable.

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