HOUSTON (AP) —
Republicans struck back Friday against Hillary Rodham Clinton's
suggestions that they have attempted to disenfranchise voters
systematically. They accused the Democratic presidential front-runner of
running a divisive campaign and favoring lax controls on voting.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a
potential GOP presidential candidate, said in Concord, New Hampshire,
that Clinton didn't know "the first thing about voting rights in New
Jersey," and simply wanted to have an opportunity to "commit greater
acts of voter fraud" around the nation.
Another potential Republican rival, Ohio Gov. John Kasich, told Fox
News that Clinton was "dividing America" and overlooking the fact that
Ohio has 28 days of early voting while her home state of New York
doesn't have any. Ohio had 35 days of early voting until he signed a law
last year lopping off a week."What is she talking about?" Kasich asked. "Don't be running around the country dividing America."
Clinton said Thursday in Houston
that a group of current and former Republican governors pursuing the
White House has "systematically and deliberately" tried to prevent
millions of Americans from voting. Clinton said the changes were aimed
at making it more difficult for minority and low-income voters to cast a
ballot and outlined steps to expand access to early voting and allow
universal, automatic voter registration for young people.
It was the first time as a presidential candidate that Clinton
singled out her potential Republican rivals by name, criticizing voting
policies of Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush,
former Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Christie.Clinton cited Christie for vetoing a bill in New Jersey to extend early voting. She said Bush had conducted a "deeply flawed" purge of eligible voters in Florida by having the names of people who were mistakenly thought to be felons removed from voting rolls.
And she accused Walker of cutting early voting, making it harder for college students to vote, while she said Perry approved laws in Texas that discriminated against minority voters.
Democratic attorneys recently
filed legal challenges to voting changes in the presidential
battleground states of Ohio and Wisconsin. One of the attorneys involved
in the lawsuits is Marc Elias, who is also serving as the Clinton
campaign's general counsel. Clinton's campaign is not officially
involved in the lawsuits.
Walker, whose state has passed
voter ID laws, said in a statement late Thursday that Clinton's
"rejection of efforts to make it easier to vote and harder to cheat not
only defies logic, but the will of the majority of Americans."
Christie vetoed legislation in
2013 that would have allowed in-person early voting at polling places
and he's criticized same-day registration. New Jersey does have a
mail-in early-voting system.
Democrats contend that
Republicans overstate the incidence of fraudulent voting to justify
steps that depress turnout from minority and other hard-to-reach voters,
many of whom would support Democratic candidates. Republicans say
Democrats overlook fraud because they want those votes.
Clinton will deliver what her
team considers her first major speech next week, in New York, opening a
new stage of her campaign. Clinton intends to paint the large Republican
field as monolithic on policy in coming months.
Her team bills the New York speech as a campaign kickoff, although she launched her candidacy in April.
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