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US ElectionsRepresentative Conyers to object to Ohio results, One Senator expected alsoby Steve Cobble, Progressive Democratics of America
At 1 P.M. on January 6, 2005 Representative John Conyers will
object to the certification of Ohio's 2004 presidential election electoral
votes. Conyers will focus on the massive violations of civil rights and voting
rights that were instigated and tolerated by partisan election authorities
in Ohio. In a vast improvement over the situation 4 years ago, PDA believes
that at least one Senate member, as well as House colleagues, will join
Conyers in his objection. We may be wrong. Perhaps there are no Senators with enough
fortitude to stand up against right-wing intimidation, in which case we will
repeat the embarrassment of 2000 that Michael Moore showed us on film. I
personally hope though, that there is at least one Senator who realizes that
democracy is not just for the Ukraine, that the suppression of African American
voters has got to stop, and that even one Senator standing up to object would
become a hero or heroine to millions of attentive Americans. When and if that first Senator steps forward, America will
be treated to a 2-hour debate on voting rights. Forty years after the Selma
march that led to passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, that national
teach-in is badly needed. We live in a nation where the president-select assumed office
after losing, in a biased election. Where African American votes were at least
3 times as likely to be thrown out as white votes. Where the Chief Supreme
Court Justice, who as a young man personally engaged in voter suppression
tactics against Latino voters in Arizona, cast one of the 5 votes that stopped
the vote count in Florida in 2000. Where the House and Senate leadership
are dominated by Southern Republicans, whose rise to power flowed directly
from the switch of segregationist whites in the solid South from solid Democrats
to solid Republicans -- a switch that came about when African Americans
won the right to vote. As Reverend Jesse Jackson says, "The segregationist
team changed parties; but they didn't change their tactics. Voter suppression
of African Americans is still a basic play in their election playbook." We saw that play repeated thousands of times in Florida in
2000, more than enough to alter the outcome. We saw the same basic voter
suppression play again in Ohio in 2004. Partisan election authorities enacted
discriminatory rules; votes were thrown out on trivialities; voting machines
using proprietary codes created by private corporations headed by partisan
CEOs were un-auditable; old punch card machines were used in poorer, urban
areas, leading to more than 90,000 "spoiled" ballots; voting machinery was
misallocated, with African American precincts not given enough machines to
avoid incredibly long lines; African American voters suffered higher rates
of tossed-out provisional ballots even when they were in the correct precincts. We saw the Republican Party creating "caging lists", training
thousands and thousands of "challengers", and sending armies of lawyers from
out-of-state into urban Ohio precincts to do what they could to deny the vote
to African Americans who were not their neighbors. They succeeded in barring
many voters from the polls. They succeeded in making thousands and thousands
of others cast provisional ballots, many of which were later thrown out.
They succeeded in slowing down the voting lines to a crawl, forcing working
people and parents with children and elderly citizens to choose between standing
in line in the November rain for 2, 4, 8 hours, just to cast a vote-or to
give up in despair and go home. These were conscious tactics. Shame on
them. But we also saw the Democratic Party shrug its shoulders,
conceding and abandoning their most loyal voting base, and accepting the pundits'
mantra, that if you can't "prove" that enough votes were suppressed or stolen
to change the outcome, then the voter suppression apparently doesn't matter.
More shame. At PDA, we believe all of this is morally wrong. The right
to vote is the foundation of our democracy, and it's wrong to actively suppress
the vote, which the Republican Party clearly did. And cheating is wrong,
whether or not others can prove it. Indeed, voter suppression based on race
is just about the most disgusting form of cheating imaginable. Look, if athletes fail their drug tests at the Olympics, do
the judges also have to prove that the drugs made the difference between the
gold medal and the silver? No, they just take away their gold medals. If a student cheats on his or her final exam, do school officials
have to prove that he or she couldn't have scored that high anyway? No, they
just flunk. If a person engages in insider trading, don't they go to jail
even if they are famous and didn't really need the money? (Trick question:
the answer is yes for Martha Stewart, no for George W. Bush.) Only when it comes to suppression of African American votes
is it appar The Republican Party has consciously and actively suppressed
African American voters in election after election for four decades now, since
the days when Chief Justice Rehnquist was just an aggressive young lawyer.
They do it as a strategy. They do it because more than 9 out of 10 African
Americans vote Democratic in Presidential elections. They will continue
to do it until the Democratic Party makes it hurt. That's why the challenge that Rep. Conyers is making on January
6th matters -because it's time to "brand" the Republican Party as the one
that works so hard to make sure African Americans, Latinos, Native Americans,
and young people do not get to vote. The vote challenge tomorrow is not
about John Kerry winning--it's about Selma and Dr. King and Robert Moses and
Fannie Lou Hamer. The vote challenge tomorrow is bottom up, because this fight
started with a bunch of brave, tenacious grassroots folks in Ohio and around
the country who refused to let voter suppression go unchallenged, who refused
to accept wrongs that the media called acceptable, who refused to "get over
it" just because everyone else said to. The vote challenge tomorrow is not just about the election
of 2004 - it's about the elections still to come, and people's right to vote
without impediment, their right to have their votes counted without chicanery,
their right to participate in elections without partisan tricks and racial
manipulation. The vote challenge tomorrow is about the next step in the
story of America, the story of our right to vote, a right won through struggle
and marching and the blood of martyrs. In two-and-a-quarter centuries America's
right to vote has slowly grown from only white males owning property to a
far broader, much fairer, more democratic slice of our people. A lot of powerful
people don't like that broader democracy - but that's America's best face,
our best hope for the future. Martin Luther King, Jr., taught that the right to vote is
the right that guarantees all other rights. On January 6th, our finest Representatives
and Senators (we hope) will stand up with the grassroots, alongside Rev. Jackson
and Rep. Conyers, and affirm Dr. King's words, by standing tall against voter
suppression. And since PDA was among those who asked them to take that risk on behalf of the right to vote, we'll be watching closely. If no Senators step forward, we're going to have a very hard time getting over it. But for those with the honor to step forward, we'll be waiting to say thank you. About the Author(s): See under Our Contributors to find out about the Author(s) of this article. |
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