A second transgender candidate running for a seat in the Republican-majority Ohio House is at risk of being disqualified from the ballot after omitting her former name on circulating petitions.
The Mercer County Board of Elections is set to vote Thursday on whether Arienne Childrey, a Democrat from Auglaize County and one of four transgender individuals campaigning for the Legislature, is eligible to run after not disclosing her previous name, also known as her deadname, on her petition paperwork.
A little-used Ohio elections law, unfamiliar even to many state elections officials, mandates that candidates disclose any name changes in the last five years on their petitions paperwork, with exemptions for name changes due to marriage. But the law isn’t listed in the 33-page candidate requirement guide and there is no space on the petition paperwork to list any former names.
The crux of your argument about “make sure you didn’t get into any controversy” is baked into the name change process…
https://uclawreview.org/2021/10/01/name-changes-do-we-need-judicial-discretion/
Ohio in particular is one such a state that requires you to publish the name change in the newspaper
https://www.ohiolegalhelp.org/topic/name-change
I had to go through this in NY, it sounds like roughly the same process. It’s the biggest pain in the ass and ended up costing around $600 or so?
That was almost a decade and like six apartments ago, and I still get spam sent to me under my dead name in the mail
Because so many read and have free access to search old legal notices in newspapers.
If you want to argue name changes are public, they should be placed in a publicly searchable database.
You mean like this?
That doesn’t go back very far, and the name changes get very lost on all the public bids, foreclosures, and what not.
It is filterable.
And it only goes back 1 month.
You ever heard of a library?
Yes, because voters should have to go a library and pour over old newspapers just to know who they are voting for.