Daily Kos

Tag: Voting Rights Act

Stopping Voter Suppression: The Press Gets It Right in Virginia

Thu Aug 07, 2008 at 12:24:53 PM PDT

Cross-posted at Project Vote's blog, Voting Matters

Weekly Voting Rights News Update

By Erin Ferns and Nathan Henderson-James

We spend a lot of time in these news updates showing how charges of voter fraud are used to discredit voter participation efforts and prime the pump for voter suppression efforts, such as the passage of voter ID bills, pushing for proof of citizenship, engaging in draconian voter purge efforts, and imposing sever restrictions on voter registration drives. We have also spent a lot of time carefully delineating the politics behind these efforts, starting with our March 2007 report The Politics Of Voter Fraud and continuing on in these diaries to name but two venues.

News Unfiltered Digest: Social Security's Birthday and McCain-Bush Threats, McCain Loses Ohio Jobs

Thu Aug 07, 2008 at 12:19:18 PM PDT

There are some items up on News Unfiltered that may interest the community.

Will McCain stand up for Ohio jobs?:

John McCain will visit Ohio today amid new revelations about his role in a deal that will cost Ohio more than 8,000 jobs. Yesterday, the Cleveland Plain Dealer revealed that while Chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, McCain, and former DHL lobbyist and current campaign manager Rick Davis, played instrumental roles in helping DHL and its German parent company take over operations in Wilmington, Ohio in 2003, despite concerns about the local impact of the deal. Both companies hired Davis' firm to push the deal through Congress, with DHL-Airborne Express paying Davis and his business partner $185,000 in 2003 and $405,000 from the German company Deutsche Post for other work in 2004 and 2005. [Cleveland Plain Dealer, 8/6/08]

Read more.

Record Youth And Minority Turnout Threatened By Persistent Election Barriers

Thu Jul 31, 2008 at 12:58:06 PM PDT

Cross-posted at Project Vote's blog, Voting Matters

Weekly Voting Rights News Update

By Erin Ferns

Reports and exits polls this entire political season have built a narrative of tremendous, even record-breaking voter participation, pushing us to believe that voter turnout in November will exceed all expectations.

Maybe.

Voter Purging Back With A Vengeance – 2008 Could See Multiple Florida 2000’s

Thu Jul 24, 2008 at 01:13:58 PM PDT

Cross-posted at Project Vote's Voting Matters Blog

Weekly Voting Rights News Update

By Erin Ferns

In 2000, Florida’s disastrous effort to purge former felons from voter rolls resulted in the disenfranchisement of hundreds if not thousands of legitimate voters and clearly influenced the outcome of the presidential contest in that state. History may repeat itself this November with states taking potentially reckless and unlawful measures to clean voter rolls before Election Day.

People died so that last night could happen

Wed Jun 04, 2008 at 07:28:43 AM PDT

Cross-posted by Will Bunch at my Philadelphia Daily News blog, Attytood:

The following article was datelined Aug. 5, 1961, and appeared in the Sunday New York Times the following day. It was headlined: BLIND RIDER HELPS BREAK COLOR LINE:

JACKSON, Miss., Aug. 5 (AP) -- Two Freedom Riders, a blind white woman and a Negro, broke the segregation barrier today in a Jackson, Miss., bus depot.

The Civil Rights Movement and Obama's candidacy

Fri Mar 21, 2008 at 01:58:25 PM PDT

The American right wing and media are currently whipping themselves into a frenzy over comments by Barack Obama’s former pastor Jeremy Wright.  

Obama responded by giving a speech on race in America: "A More Perfect Union"

I am the son of a black man from Kenya and a white woman from Kansas.  I was raised with the help of a white grandfather who survived a Depression to serve in Patton’s Army during World War II and a white grandmother who worked on a bomber assembly line at Fort Leavenworth while he was overseas.  I’ve gone to some of the best schools in America and lived in one of the world’s poorest nations.  I am married to a black American who carries within her the blood of slaves and slaveowners – an inheritance we pass on to our two precious daughters.  I have brothers, sisters, nieces, nephews, uncles and cousins, of every race and every hue, scattered across three continents, and for as long as I live, I will never forget that in no other country on Earth is my story even possible.

[UPDATED] Obama Alert: Reagan's Dismal Legacy on Civil Rights

Fri Jan 18, 2008 at 12:05:19 PM PDT

Subtitle: It's Not the "Kumbayah" That Gets Things Done, Mr. Obama. It's Hard-Fought Legislation Enacted Over the Protests of "Movement Conservatives," Especially the Legislative Achievements of the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, and the 1990s.

Mr. Obama, get over your iconic view of Ronald Reagan's message: Reagan was a racially divisive, and socially regressive president. From "Dismal Legacy on Civil Rights," the New York Times editorial page on March 21, 1988:

Supreme Court Test for GOP Vote Suppression Strategy

Wed Dec 26, 2007 at 03:04:42 PM PDT

(From the diaries ~ smintheus)

As the Washington Post detailed on Tuesday, the Supreme Court this term will decide a set of voter identification cases which could well determine the outcome of the 2008 election.  In a narrow legal sense, the cases will address the constitutionality of new voter ID laws in Indiana and other states.  But more important, the Roberts Court will decide whether to rubber stamp an essential tactic in the all-out Republican war to suppress the votes of minority - and likely Democratic - Americans.

The combined cases to be argued on January 9th, Crawford v. Marion County Election Board and Indiana Democratic Party v. Rokita, have their genesis in the wave of draconian new voter identification laws passed by Republican majority statehouses around the nation.  As the Post noted, Indiana joined Georgia, Missouri and Arizona in enacting stringent new photo ID requirements for voters, despite a complete absence of polling place fraud in these or any other state:

The state's Republican-led legislature passed the law in 2005 requiring voters to have ID, even though the state had never prosecuted a case of voter impersonation...

...Indiana Secretary of State Todd Rokita (R) said voter fraud was something he was asked about "almost daily" by constituents. "At the Kiwanis Club, the chamber of commerce groups, people would say, 'Why aren't you asking who I am when I vote?' " Rokita said.

The state law he and the legislature came up with requires voters to show a government-issued photo ID that has an expiration date, such as a driver's license or a passport. Nondrivers can receive an identification card from the Bureau of Motor Vehicles.

To date, the courts have agreed with Rokita.  The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the Indiana law by a 2-1 margin.  Unsurprisingly, the Court's two Republican appointees blessed the Indiana Republican tactic.  Reagan appointee Judge Richard Posner proclaimed, "It is exceedingly difficult to maneuver in today's America without a photo ID."  But Clinton appointee Terence Evans in his dissent stated the obvious motivation and desired outcome of the Hoosier State GOP gambit:

"Let's not beat around the bush: The Indiana voter photo ID law is a not-too-thinly veiled attempt to discourage election-day turnout by certain folks believed to skew Democratic."

Which is exactly right.  As I detailed just before the 2006 mid-terms, the Indiana, Georgia and other similar laws are an essential ingredient of the Republican strategy of "Divide, Suppress and Conquer" which aims to drive down the participation of potential Democratic and independent voters through unprecented redistricting, curbs on registration, onerous new ID requirements, and polling place eligibility challenges:

Not content to prevent the enfranchisement of new voters, the GOP is committed to blocking their exercise of the right to vote. At the both the state and federal level, the GOP in the name of battling fraud has put up a raft of new roadblocks and barriers to voting with burdensome voter identification requirements.

The fact that voter fraud in the United States is virtually non-existent doesn't derail Republicans in their quest to block access to the ballot box. Just this year, the U.S. Election Assistance Commission issued a report refuting the myth of fraud at polling places. "There is widespread but not unanimous agreement," the report concluded, "that there is little polling place fraud, or at least much less than is claimed, including voter impersonation, "dead" voters, noncitizen voting and felon voters."

The result is a host of new state laws advanced by Republicans with the transparent aim of suppressing the potential Democratic - and especially black - vote. As Perrspectives reported previously, Georgia's onerous new voter ID card program requiring voters to visit one of the state's limited number of offices, would have trimmed up to 150,000 people (primarily African-Americans and the elderly) from the rolls. (The bill's sponsor, Augusta Republican Sue Burmeister explained that when black voters in her black precincts "are not paid to vote, they don't go to the polls.") Versions of the Georgia law have been ruled unconstitutional twice by federal judge Harold Murphy. And while Indiana's new voter ID law and the milder version in Arizona have to date withstood judicial scrutiny, another measure in Missouri similar to that in Georgia has been blocked during the 2006 elections. In his rebuke to the state of Missouri, Judge Richard Callahan deemed the right to vote "a right and not a license."

Voter suppression has been a centerpiece of the Karl Rove Republican electoral strategy in both the states and within the Bush administration.  (While supporting the new voter ID laws, the Bush administration's only prosecution for violations of the 1965 Voting Rights Act was against the African-American head of the Democratic Party in Noxubee County, Mississippi for using coercion and intimidation to prevent the white voters from going to the polls.)  Voter suppression, after all, was the primary objective of Alberto Gonzales' purge of United States attorneys.  As I wrote in March:

Simply put, the Bush White House planned to systematically drive down the turnout of Democrats and independents at the ballot box through an unaccountable campaign against "voter fraud"...

...While former White House counsel Harriet Miers first raised the specter of replacing all of the prosecutors in early 2005, it was President Bush himself who emphasized the importance of supposed voter fraud to Attorney General Gonzales:

Last October, President Bush spoke with Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales to pass along concerns by Republicans that some prosecutors were not aggressively addressing voter fraud, the White House said Monday. Senator Pete V. Domenici, Republican of New Mexico, was among the politicians who complained directly to the president, according to an administration official.

The case of Seattle prosecutor John McKay illustrates the Republicans' preoccupation with voter fraud. Washington State Republicans, including Congressman Doc Hastings, were furious at McKay over what they claimed was his inaction on vote fraud in the wake of Democrat Christine Gregoire's 129 vote margin of victory (out of almost 3,000,000 votes cast) in the twice recounted 2004 gubernatorial campaign. On July 5, 2005, Tom McCabe of the Building Industry Association of Washington wrote to Hastings, blunting demanding, "please ask the White House to replace Mr. McKay. If you decide not to do this, let me know why."

In 2008, the Supreme Court will decide whether or not the Republican Party will succeed in its fraudulent campaign against mythical vote fraud.  (It does not require a crystal ball to predict where John Roberts and Sam Alito will come down on the issue))  With the Republican Party in danger of losing the White House and yielding even larger Democratic majorities in Congress, the stakes for the GOP are high indeed.  The stakes for the American people and the future of American democracy, of course, are much higher.

** Crossposted at Perrspectives **

Without the Voting Rights Act, There Would Be No Minority Elected Officials

Fri Sep 07, 2007 at 09:47:38 AM PDT

Weekly Voting Rights News Update

This an entry in a series of blogs to keep people informed on current election reform and voting rights issues in the news.

Featured Story of the Week:

"The Voting Rights Act and the Election of Nonwhite Officials" -  PS: Political Science and Politics

There is a strong correlation between the Voting Rights Act and the election of minorities to national, state and local levels office, according to this study in the July issue of the PS: Political Science and Politics. In fact, the numbers indicate that without the provisions in the Voting Rights Act, there would be almost no minority elected officials anywhere in the United States.

Gonzo But Not Forgotten: The Crimes of Alberto Gonzales

Mon Aug 27, 2007 at 09:23:36 AM PDT

The welcome resignation of Attorney General Alberto Gonzales may be long overdue, but it is hardly the end of the story of his wrong-doing at the Bush White House and the Department of Justice.  From illegal NSA domestic surveillance, condoning torture and the unprecedented expansion of presidential powers to undermining minority voting rights, the political purge of U.S. prosecutors and lying under oath to Congress, Gonzales' deception, misdeeds and blatant criminality extend well beyond Bush's beloved Fredo.

"What to the American Slave is Your Fourth of July?” Black America Grieves

Thu Jul 05, 2007 at 08:07:09 AM PDT

copyright © 2007 Betsy L. Angert.  BeThink.org

I, as a white person mourn on this day, for every man and woman Black, white, brown, red, or yellow are my brethren.  I feel the pain of all those that have gone before me.  My heart aches most for those whose flesh is darkest.  It seems, try as they might Afro-Americans can never escape the bondage, the bigotry that enslaves them.  The color of their skin shades their every encounter.  I recognize that only days ago, in this duplicitous land founded on the principles of freedom and justice for all, segregation was again endorsed by the highest Court in the country.  The Supreme Court ruled “Schools can't use race to assign students.” History demonstrates, left to their own devices whites will not desegregate.

Miss. Blacks Discriminated Against Whites, Judge Says

Fri Jun 29, 2007 at 09:48:13 PM PDT

You know, a few years ago this really would have suprised me. But after the Supreme Court decisions of the last week, this doesn't suprise me. A federal judge in Mississippi has actually ruled that blacks in a Mississippi county violated the Voting Rights Act and discriminated against whites. Honestly, I am again at a loss for words. Only this reminds us, yet again, of how critical it is that we take back the presidency. We have to and start knocking some sense back into the judiciary.

Poll

My bullshit meter is

17%7 votes
9%4 votes
73%30 votes

| 41 votes | Vote | Results

Update: von Spakovsky opposed mail registration

Wed Jun 13, 2007 at 03:36:45 PM PDT

By Michael Slater

I posted yesterday on Hans von Spakovsky nomination, noting that a common theme that unifies his work "is not just that it advances his political party’s interests but that it does so by impeding minorities from voting and choosing their political representatives." Now there’s more evidence.

Senate Committee Passes DC Voting Rights Act

Wed Jun 13, 2007 at 12:11:14 PM PDT

Earlier today the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs voted to send the DC Voting Rights Act to the full Senate. There are only a handful of people in between the people of DC actually getting a vote in the House.

Read more on what you can do after the jump.

Standards, Tests, and Questions: The von Spakovsky Nomination

Tue Jun 12, 2007 at 03:34:33 PM PDT

I’ve been following with interest the debate between Gerry Hebert, Bob Bauer and Brad Smith on Hans von Spakovsky’s nomination to the FEC (courtesy Rick Hasen Election Law blog coverage). Mr. Hebert urges the Senate Rules Committee to reject von Spakovsky’s nomination on the well-documented grounds that he has used his position as Counsel to the Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights to advance his partisan agenda at the expense of our nation’s voting rights laws.

YearlyKos: What we have to thank George Bush for... or

Tue Jun 12, 2007 at 10:52:13 AM PDT

We’re having a PARTY!

The only good thing that has come of George Bush’s presidency ("presidency") is that he got the progressive left off its ass.  Since he took office, showing us on Day One that "compassionate" to these guys meant cutting off health care for desperately poor people around the world, we have awoken,  formed activist communities,  put our heads together, shared the work, and started to retake our country from the corrupt and evil scoundrels now running the place (into the ground).  And, in that vein, WE’RE HAVING A PARTY!

Live in the greater DC area?  Coming in for Take Back America?  Get started early at a low-dollar fundraiser for the August YearlyKos Convention!  Sunday afternoon, 5-7 pm, just down the street from the Hilton where Take Back America starts the next morning, we’re having music, food, networking, and DOOR PRIZES!

And let me add that this will be special food and special door prizes.

UPDATE 2: Clinton Did It Too, and Other Lies Exposed in the Purge Files

Tue Mar 13, 2007 at 02:21:54 PM PDT

You know how all the Fox Noise and Gooper apologists for the Bush Administration's firing of the Purged Prosecutors have been claiming "Clinton did it too"?  Eh, not so much.

I haven't been able to get onto the TPM Muckraker archive but the New York Times has a link to the Senate Judiciary Committee website, which is full of goodies.  An e-mail from Kyle Sampson, the just-resigned chief of staff to Abu G, to Harriet Miers, former WH counsel and all-round Dubya cheerleader, dated January 9, 2006 gives the lie to that particular assertion:

...once confirmed by the Senate and appointed,U.S. Attorneys serve for four years and then holdover indefinitely (at the pleasure of the President, of course). In recent memory, during the Reagan and Clinton Administrations, Presidents Reagan and Clinton did not seek to remove and replace the U.S. Attorneys they had appointed whose terms had expired, but instead permitted those U.S. Attorneys to serve indefinitely under the holdover provision. (Underscoring in original.)

UPDATE:See discussion of a few additional documents at the end of the diary.  This will be an ongoing process, I think!)

They Don't Work For Us

Tue Feb 20, 2007 at 07:07:42 PM PDT

Crossposted from The Realist

If you honestly believe that politicians are working for the people, then this post will be hard for you to take.

"When I'm asked to carry a bill, I do, whether I like it or not--I work for the people. This bill had some good points and some bad points, and it was defeated by executive decision. They said there's other bills coming along that would suit the needs of the people, so they voted this one down."

Here's the down and dirty.


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