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Lawmakers Want To Know Why Summit County Ballots Were Received, Not Counted

Some Ohio lawmakers want Secretary of State Jon Husted to investigate why nearly 900 absentee ballots in Summit County were received but not counted. From our Statehouse Bureau Jo Ingles has more.

Ohio law says absentee ballots must be postmarked on or before Election Day and received within 10 days to be counted.

But Democratic State Representative Emelia Sykes says the 900 ballots in Summit County were not counted because they were not postmarked because of changes in the way the post office processes mail after the closings of mail processing centers.

“Apparently there is a way to go to the post office and through the post office and to the board of elections without a postmark.”

Sykes says some local races were close and thinks those ballots could have made a difference.

In a written statement, Husted says his office is working with the U.S. Postmaster General but also says the bipartisan board of elections in Summit County has followed the law and done the right thing.