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Rep. Russo: Ohio Republicans Place New Burdens on Voters by Adding Unnecessary Hurdles to the Voting Process

November 19, 2025
C. Allison Russo News

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COLUMBUS — State Rep. Allison Russo (D-Upper Arlington) today condemned the passage of anti-voter Senate Bill (SB) 293 which places new burdens on voters by adding unnecessary hurdles to the voting process, shortening the time available for Ohioans to make their voices heard, and weakening essential accountability measures. 

“Republicans are trying to silence thousands of Ohio voters who use mail-in voting by eliminating the grace period for mail-in ballots to be returned via the postal service after Election Day,” said Rep. Russo. “Ohio’s grace period was already shortened last year from 7 to 4 days. There is no legal basis to eliminate it, and it is clear Republicans in Ohio and other GOP-led states are only doing this to bolster Trump’s recent attacks on mail-in voting and cast doubt on future election results they do not like. It’s straight up voter suppression.”

The bill, which moved with lightning speed through the General Assembly and was heavily amended only the day before passage, would throw out absentee ballots because the mail is late. Current law allows for a grace period for mailed absentee ballots to arrive after election day. The bill eliminates this grace period and says all ballots must arrive by 7:30pm on election day. This creates additional, unnecessary barriers to people who simply want to legally exercise their right to vote and may not be able to physically make it to their polling location. In 2024, nearly 1 million Ohioans voted by absentee mail-in ballot or absentee drop box and thousands would have not counted under this law.  

It also creates vague and problematic procedures that could cancel registrations when other agencies’ databases reflect different information or records, whether or not those records are factually correct. Without clean procedures in place, Ohioans could easily be disenfranchised when one of the multiple databases that contain their information have inaccurate or out-of-date information. 

SB 293 now heads to the governor’s office for signature.