NAACP Calls For Transparency From State After Voting Issues Cause Confusion

As voters went out to the polls for the primary election, some were met with lots of confusion.

“You came to make a difference in the city, make a difference in what’s going on and you can’t vote. A lot of people left,” voter Barbara Hollis said.

She showed up to Baltimore IT Academy just before 8 a.m. to vote, and no one was there. Turns out, the pollworkers couldn’t access the secure room where the voting equipment was stored, so they have to delay opening for 2 hours. The Baltimore City Circuit Court ruled that the polling place had to stay open an extra hour because of it.

Between changes in time and polling location to a registration snafu, the Maryland State Conference of the NAACP is calling for answers from the state.

“There was a lot of frustration about changes in polling places, access to polling places at appropriate times. The major issue is that the state of Maryland failed in its responsibility to protect the right to vote for its citizens,” Kobi Little, the chairman of the Political Action Committee for the Maryland State Conference of the NAACP, said.

The Department of Transportation Motor Vehicle Administration determined that about 80,000 residents were not properly registered to vote because of a programming error. The impacted voters had to file provisional ballots to make sure their votes counted. Little wonders if it impacted the election.

Click here to read the rest of the story written by over at WMAR

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *