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Oklahoma State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: January
24, 2005
Senator Glenn Coffee
Senator Coffee Introduces Legislation to Ensure
Military Absentee Ballots Counted in Oklahoma Elections
Senator Glenn
Coffee of Oklahoma City has introduced legislation to help ensure
that overseas absentee ballots from members of the U.S. Armed Forces
and their families are counted in Oklahoma elections.
“The least we can do for our fighting men and women, who
are risking their lives for our freedom, is to ensure that their
votes are counted,” stated Coffee, who serves as the Senate
Republican Floor Leader.
“Currently, Oklahoma’s election law offers too little
flexibility for counting military ballots and too little time for
absentee ballots to be sent overseas, filled out, and returned.
Senate Bill 942 attempts to make it easier for military personnel
and their families stationed overseas to have their votes counted
in Oklahoma elections,” he said.
Coffee’s bill would allow a six day grace period for overseas
absentee ballots to be received and counted by an election board.
The grace period would run until 5:00 p.m. on the Monday following
a Presidential primary, a primary election, a runoff, and a general
election. Currently, Oklahoma election law allows a grace period
for overseas absentee ballots only in primary runoffs for federal
elections.
Coffee’s bill also moves up the dates for the candidate filing
period and primary elections to accommodate recommendations by the
U.S. military that states allow 45 days from the time an overseas
absentee ballot is mailed until the time it must be received to
be counted.
Under Coffee’s bill, the three day candidate filing period
would begin on the last Thursday in March and run through the following
Saturday. Currently, the candidate filing period is in June, and
runs on a Monday through Wednesday schedule.
Primary elections would be held on the second Tuesday in June of
each even-numbered year. Currently, primaries are held on the last
Tuesday in July.
“The bottom line is that our state should go the extra mile
to make sure the votes of our military personnel are counted. I
am very optimistic that in this time of war we will find broad,
bipartisan support for this proposal,” Coffee said.
For
more information contact:
Senate Communications Office - (405) 521-5774

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