Ohio secretary of state, backed by Trump, says mail ballots are 'safe and secure'
Frank LaRose, Ohio's Republican secretary of state running for reelection with former President Donald Trump's endorsement, said Tuesday that -- in a break with Trump -- mail-in ballots represent a "secure" method to vote in this year's midterms.
At a brewery in Cleveland, LaRose said he was happy he received Trump's endorsement but that the support doesn't mean the two "agree on everything." Trump has lambasted absentee and mail-in voting, baselessly claiming without evidence that those methods are ripe for fraud.
"I don't speak for President Trump. He speaks for himself and does so very well," said LaRose. "But that doesn't mean we agree on everything. I can tell you that Ohio runs secure elections. In many ways, we're really the example for the rest of the country. And President Trump himself has said that Ohio runs clean elections."
LaRose defended his record, leaning into GOP talking points on drop boxes and other voting issues.
"We faced this in Ohio in the month of September of 2020. I was sued five different times. And they were asking us to expand drop boxes to locations that we couldn't secure so we were worried about doing that. There were lawsuits that were asking us to stop doing signature verification, which I thought was a positively terrible idea," LaRose said.
-- ABC News’ Paulina Tam