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Pilkington reports: "Voting rights groups are struggling to hold back a tide of new laws that are likely to make it harder for millions of Americans to vote in the presidential election in November and could distort the outcome of the race for the White House."

Florida has proven to be a 'testing ground for voter suppression techniques across the country,' according to the NAACP. (photo: Marc Serota/Reuters)
Florida has proven to be a 'testing ground for voter suppression techniques across the country,' according to the NAACP. (photo: Marc Serota/Reuters)



Florida Leads Assault on Voters' Rights

By Ed Pilkington, Guardian UK

27 July 12

 

oting rights groups are struggling to hold back a tide of new laws that are likely to make it harder for millions of Americans to vote in the presidential election in November and could distort the outcome of the race for the White House.

Since January 2011, 19 states have passed a total of 24 laws that create hurdles between voters and the ballot box. Some states are newly requiring people to show government-issued photo cards at polling stations. Others have whittled down early voting hours, imposed restrictions on registration of new voters, banned people with criminal records from voting or attempted to purge eligible voters from the electoral roll.

The assault on voter rights is particularly acute in key swing states where the presidential race is likely to be settled. Five of the nine key battleground states identified by the Republican strategist Karl Rove have introduced laws that could suppress turnout – Florida, Iowa, New Hampshire, Ohio and Virginia.

Between them, the states that have imposed restrictions account for the lion's share of the 270 electoral college votes that Barack Obama or Mitt Romney must win to take the presidency. Sixteen of the states that have passed new voter restrictions between them hold 214 electoral votes.

"We are seeing a dramatic assault on voting rights, the most significant pushback on democratic participation that we've seen in decades," said Wendy Weiser of the non-partisan thinktank the Brennan Center for Justice, and the co-author of the definitive study of US voter suppression in the 2012 election cycle. "These laws could make it harder for millions of eligible American citizens to participate, particularly in swing states."

The epicentre of the attack sweeping across America is Florida, which has a long history of voter suppression. With a famously evenly balanced population that in 2000 elected George Bush by an official majority of only 537 out of almost 6 million votes cast, even relatively minor distortion of electoral turnout could have huge implications not just for the result in Florida but, given the state's prominent role in determining the outcome of recent presidential elections, the whole of the US, and – by extension – the world.

Florida Republicans have made several blatant attempts to suppress turnout this election cycle. One of the first acts of governor Rick Scott when he took office in 2011 was to reimpose what is in effect a lifelong voting ban on anyone convicted of a felony - including 1.3 million Floridians who have fully completed their sentences.

"There are over a million people in Florida who no longer have the full rights of citizenship and right to vote," said Baylor Johnson of Florida ACLU. "One million people – that's the White House for a generation, which gives you an idea of why they are trying so hard to stop people voting."

The felony trap is just a small part of it. Over the past 18 months the Republican-controlled state government in Florida has introduced a rash of new restrictions. They include a reduction in early voting hours that will hit black communities that made disproportionate use of the opportunity through their churches; changes to the rules that will make it harder for those who change address to vote and could catch hundreds of thousands of families who have lost their homes through foreclosure; and attempts to erase thousands of voters from the electoral roll through a "purge list" that was so flawed that the state's electoral supervisors refused to touch it.

"Florida has proven to be a testing ground for voter suppression techniques across the country. It's ground zero of this stuff," said Hilary Shelton who heads the NAACP's Washington bureau.

Republican lawmakers in Florida and the other 18 states that have gone down the road of voter restrictions this election cycle insist they are motivated by a concern to prevent fraud. When the governor of Texas, Rick Perry, introduced a voter ID law last year he did so using his emergency powers, saying the rule change would "appropriately help maintain the integrity and fairness of our electoral system".

Yet studies into the extent of fraud at the polls have found cases few and far between. "You are more likely to find someone struck by lightning than someone who carries out impersonation fraud to cast an improper vote," Weiser said.

Occasionally the veil has slipped, revealing what might be a deeper motivation for Republican lawmakers. Last month, Mike Turzai, leader of the Republicans in the Pennsylvania assembly, addressed a rally of party members about the state's new voter ID law that could ensnare more than 750,000 registered voters who do not possess the necessary photo cards recognised under the new rules.

"Voter ID, which is going to allow Governor Romney to win the state of Pennsylvania. Done," said Turzai.

'I don't have a problem making it harder'

A leading New Hampshire Republican, William O'Brien, speaking to the party faithful earlier this year at a time he was attempting to pass a law that would have prevented many college students voting in the state, gave an inkling of his thinking. Students were "foolish," he said. "Voting as a liberal. That's what kids do … they just vote their feelings."

True to form, it was a Florida Republican, Mike Bennett, who put it most succinctly, saying during a debate about the state's voter clampdown that he wanted to make democratic participation easy. "I don't have a problem making it harder. I want people in Florida to want to vote as bad as that person in Africa who walks 200 miles across the desert. This should not be easy."

Not all the steps taken to turn the November presidential election into a walk across the Saharan desert are as comical as Georgia's. As the Jackson Free Press discovered, under the state's new rules, voters would need to produce a certified birth certificate in order to get a photo ID, but would need to produce a photo ID in order to get a certified birth certificate.

Georgia's catch-22 is currently on hold pending federal approval for its voter ID law. The US department of justice has been taking a robust stance this year, blocking attempts to suppress the turnout in Texas and South Carolina, while civil lawsuits are pending in Pennsylvania and several other states.

But with the presidential election less than four months away, electoral observers are watching closely to monitor the effects of restrictions that almost invariably hit poor people, black and other ethnic minorities, elderly people and students. The added burden falls in a variety of ways: poor people, for instance, often do not have cars, and so find the trip to an office issuing ID cards more onerous. African American men have higher rates of felony convictions and therefore fall into the felony trap – in Florida about one in five black men have been disenfranchised effectively for life.

For observers of Florida's long history of electoral discimination, this all sounds far too familiar for comfort. Before the 1965 Voting Rights Act, Florida, mirrored by others across the south, deployed a number of techniques to prevent black people voting.

There was the poll tax that allowed everybody to vote, as long as they could afford the tax (many African Americans couldn't); a literacy test that allowed whites to vote with a simple cross while blacks had to recite the preamble to the constitution word perfect before they could cast their ballot; and "multiple annexations", where voters had to travel to several offices over distances of 100 miles or more just to ensure they could vote.

Such egregious barriers are in the past, but the rash of new laws erecting hurdles in the 2012 election cycle has chilling echoes. "We are looking at a return of discriminatory policies at state level," the NAACP's Shelton said. "Jim Crow might be dead and buried, but James E Crow Esq. is very much alive and kicking."

 

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+19 # dkonstruction 2012-07-27 12:47
It has been 12 years since Bush stole his first presidential election by throwing african americans off the voting roles...where were the democrats then (and sadly, where was Nader, who i voted for -- and who did not cost gore the election since all of the serious studies show he won florida -- but Nader promised to be a "watchdog" after the election and so the first thing he should have done was go down to florida and scream bloody murder at how the election was being stolen essentially by the old, racist tactics of preventing blacks from voting). And where were the dems when ACORN was being taken down (not to mention ACORN's liberal, white donors), the most effective voter registration organization (and advocate for poor people's needs) in the country? To not have developed and maintained a serious campaign about voting rights and only to wake up to this months before the next election when it is already probably too late to do anything about these heinous tactics is just another example of democratic party lameness. give them the opportunity and they will shoot themselves in the head 9 times out of 10. All of Obama's fundraising and get out the vote drives may be meaningless if enough people are thrown off the roles in just a couple of key states. Not like they shouldn't have seen this one coming so WTF have they been doing for 3 years (if not for 12) to prepare for this one?
 
 
+4 # angelfish 2012-07-27 20:32
WHY don't they trust the people? Trying to "Rig" the election to favor their candidate is so UN-American as to be laughable if it wasn't so desperate. Let the people elect who they WANT without all the nefarious machinations to get their Boob into the White House! We've ALREADY seen the disastrous effects of their previous Bull-Puckey! The "shrub" (Thank You, Mollie Ivins!) would NEVER have gotten in without the SCOTUS and Florida's disallowing thousands of votes for Al Gore! Never Vote ReTHUGlican! The People, UNITED, will NEVER be defeated!
 
 
+5 # pernsey 2012-07-27 21:55
Rigging the voting by blocking people from voting is the only way Mitt has a prayer, just like Bush, it must be stolen. If the GOP were so great, they wouldnt need all these tactics. This is the only way the etch-a-sketch has a half of a prayer of winning.
 
 
+5 # Regina 2012-07-27 22:13
There are GOP staffers crowing out loud that the voter limitations will enable Romney to be elected. There is no voter fraud, just Republican fraud. Some of the conspiracies are being investigated by DOJ, but it will probably be a case of too little, too late. We have to keep screaming. Some TV commentators are exposing this criminal conspiracy, but very little gets to the public in print.
 
 
+4 # Mrcead 2012-07-28 02:23
Bugs Bunny had it right. Saw off the state of Florida at the dotted line and let South America have it.
 
 
+3 # Regina 2012-07-28 09:32
If it were only Florida there would be no major problem. But this conspiracy is national, drummed up by the Republican Governors' Association. It goes far beyond Florida and the Old South -- Pennsylvania is one of the worst. Moreover, non-Dixie states are not subject to federal oversight as required by the Voting Rights Act.
 
 
+5 # ABen 2012-07-28 08:27
This recent wave of voter suppression laws are nothing less than Jim Crow 2012. Voter participation is the life blood of a healthy representative democracy, and laws that obstruct ANY legal voter from exercising the franchise are intrinsically unAmerican.
 
 
+4 # ericlipps 2012-07-28 10:29
I await the day when guys like Florida's Mike Bennett are willing to support laws making it harder for THEM to vote. As for New Hampshire's William O'Brien, does he seriously expect us to believe those howling mobs of Tea Partiers are going to do anything other than "just vote their feelings"?

The way I see it, conservatives like him hate liberals because liberalism is largely intellectual while they value "gut feelings" instead. In other words, liberalism, right or wrong, is a movement of the mind, while cdnservatism is a movement of the bowels.
 
 
+4 # fredboy 2012-07-28 10:39
Florida destroyed the voting rights of thousands of qualified black voters in 2000, giving the "election" to Bush and sending America straight to hell. Don't let it happen again.
 
 
+2 # Harold R. Mencher 2012-07-28 13:42
Where the hell is Obama and the Democrats in all of this, and where the hell is the Department of Justice in all of this? This is a total repeat of what happened in the 2000 Presidential election, but so much worse since the federal court system wasn’t anywhere nearly as contaminated as it is today with Republican extremist judges, thanks again to the cooperation by the Senate Democrats in helping GWB fill the court system with well over 300 of his rotten judges with lifetime appointments all, not the least being Samuel Alito and John Roberts on SCOTUS. And, to add insult to injury, we now, by law, have to use corrupt and unverifiable electronic voting machines to cast our vote where, back in 2000, it was mostly paper ballots counted by hand.

Back in 2000, Janet Reno who headed the Clinton DOJ, could have and should have intervened in the Florida recount debacle by investigating these phony lists put out by Jeb Bush and his corrupt Secretary of State, Katherine Harris, before they were used to invalidate well over 100 thousand perfectly legal voters. But, like most Democrats, she didn’t have the huevos to jump into the fray. Her excuse was that it was not in her purview which was pure BS and a total cop-out.
 

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