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The Nation
April 29, 2004
Vanishing
Votes
by Gregory
Palast
On October 29, 2002, George W. Bush signed the Help America Vote Act (HAVA).
Hidden behind its apple-pie-and-motherhood name lies a nasty civil rights time
bomb.
First,
the purges. In the months leading up to the November 2000 presidential election,
Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris, in coordination with Governor Jeb
Bush, ordered local election supervisors to purge 57,700 voters from the registries,
supposedly ex-cons not allowed to vote in Florida. At least 90.2 percent of
those on this "scrub" list, targeted to lose their civil rights, are
innocent. Notably, more than half--about 54 percent--are black or Hispanic.
You can argue all night about the number ultimately purged, but there's no argument
that this electoral racial pogrom ordered by Jeb Bush's operatives gave the
White House to his older brother. HAVA not only blesses such purges, it requires
all fifty states to implement a similar search-and-destroy mission against vulnerable
voters. Specifically, every state must, by the 2004 election, imitate Florida's
system of computerizing voter files. The law then empowers fifty secretaries
of state--fifty Katherine Harrises--to purge these lists of "suspect"
voters.
The purge is back, big time. Following the disclosure in December 2000 of the
black voter purge in Britain's Observer newspaper, NAACP lawyers sued the state.
The civil rights group won a written promise from Governor Jeb and from Harris's
successor to return wrongly scrubbed citizens to the voter rolls. According
to records given to the courts by ChoicePoint, the company that generated the
computerized lists, the number of Floridians who were questionably tagged totals
91,000. Willie Steen is one of them. Recently, I caught up with Steen outside
his office at a Tampa hospital. Steen's case was easy. You can't work in a hospital
if you have a criminal record. (My copy of Harris's hit list includes an ex-con
named O'Steen, close enough to cost Willie Steen his vote.) The NAACP held up
Steen's case to the court as a prime example of the voter purge evil.
The state admitted Steen's innocence. But a year after the NAACP won his case,
Steen still couldn't register. Why was he still under suspicion? What do we
know about this "potential felon," as Jeb called him? Steen, unlike
our President, honorably served four years in the US military. There is, admittedly,
a suspect mark on his record: Steen remains an African-American.
If you're black, voting in America is a game of chance. First, there's the chance
your registration card will simply be thrown out. Millions of minority citizens
registered to vote using what are called motor-voter forms. And Republicans
know it. You would not be surprised to learn that the Commission on Civil Rights
found widespread failures to add these voters to the registers. My sources report
piles of dust-covered applications stacked up in election offices.
Second, once registered, there's the chance you'll be named a felon. In Florida,
besides those fake felons on Harris's scrub sheets, some 600,000 residents are
legally barred from voting because they have a criminal record in the state.
That's one state. In the entire nation 1.4 million black men with sentences
served can't vote, 13 percent of the nation's black male population.
At step three, the real gambling begins. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 guaranteed
African-Americans the right to vote--but it did not guarantee the right to have
their ballots counted. And in one in seven cases, they aren't. Take Gadsden
County. Of Florida's sixty-seven counties, Gadsden has the highest proportion
of black residents: 58 percent. It also has the highest "spoilage"
rate, that is, ballots tossed out on technicalities: one in eight votes cast
but not counted. Next door to Gadsden is white-majority Leon County, where virtually
every vote is counted (a spoilage rate of one in 500).
How do votes spoil? Apparently, any old odd mark on a ballot will do it. In
Gadsden, some voters wrote in Al Gore instead of checking his name. Their votes
did not count.
Harvard law professor Christopher Edley Jr., a member of the Commission on Civil
Rights, didn't like the smell of all those spoiled ballots. He dug into the
pile of tossed ballots and, deep in the commission's official findings, reported
this: 14.4 percent of black votes--one in seven--were "invalidated,"
i.e., never counted. By contrast, only 1.6 percent of nonblack voters' ballots
were spoiled.
Florida's electorate is 11 percent African-American. Florida refused to count
179,855 spoiled ballots. A little junior high school algebra applied to commission
numbers indicates that 54 percent, or 97,000, of the votes "spoiled"
were cast by black folk, of whom more than 90 percent chose Gore. The nonblack
vote divided about evenly between Gore and Bush. Therefore, had Harris allowed
the counting of these ballots, Al Gore would have racked up a plurality of about
87,000 votes in Florida--162 times Bush's official margin of victory.
That's Florida. Now let's talk about America. In the 2000 election, 1.9 million
votes cast were never counted. Spoiled for technical reasons, like writing in
Gore's name, machine malfunctions and so on. The reasons for ballot rejection
vary, but there's a suspicious shading to the ballots tossed into the dumpster.
Edley's team of Harvard experts discovered that just as in Florida, the number
of ballots spoiled was--county by county, precinct by precinct--in direct proportion
to the local black voting population.
Florida's racial profile mirrors the nation's--both in the percentage of voters
who are black and the racial profile of the voters whose ballots don't count.
"In 2000, a black voter in Florida was ten times as likely to have their
vote spoiled--not counted--as a white voter," explains political scientist
Philip Klinkner, co-author of Edley's Harvard report. "National figures
indicate that Florida is, surprisingly, typical. Given the proportion of nonwhite
to white voters in America, then, it appears that about half of all ballots
spoiled in the USA, as many as 1 million votes, were cast by nonwhite voters."
So there you have it. In the last presidential election, approximately 1 million
black and other minorities voted, and their ballots were thrown away. And they
will be tossed again in November 2004, efficiently, by computer--because HAVA
and other bogus reform measures, stressing reform through complex computerization,
do not address, and in fact worsen, the racial bias of the uncounted vote.
One million votes will disappear in a puff of very black smoke. And when the
smoke clears, the Bush clan will be warming their political careers in the light
of the ballot bonfire. HAVA nice day.
Gregory Palast is a reporter and columnist for
Britain's Observer newspaper
www.gregpalast.com
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