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[A-List] Jim Crow Lives in Florida Again



October 29, 2002

THE RE-ELECTION OF JIM CROW:
How Jeb Bush's Team is Trying to Steal Florida Again

By Greg Palast
Southern Exposure Special Report

There is no shame.

In 2000, Katherine Harris, Florida Secretary of State, ordered county
elections officials to purge 57,000 citizens from voter registries as felons
not allowed to vote in Florida. In fact, about 95 percent of these voters
were
innocent of crimes -- but 54 percent were guilty of being African-American.
No
guess there: a voter's race is right there on the voter form. So there was
the
election: BBC Television, for whom I conducted the investigation of this
black-out operation, figures Al Gore lost 22,000 votes this way.

But I was wrong. The company that put together this racial roster that fixed
the election, DBT On-Line of Boca Raton, has now 'fessed up, having been
sued
by the NAACP for violating Floridians' civil rights. They have turned over
to
the NAACP's lawyers a report indicating that the state ordered the purge of
94,000 voters and that, according to the company's data, no more than 3,000
are likely illegal voters.

In April of this year, Harris wrote that my reporting was "twisted and
maniacally partisan" -- but not, in the main, wrong. The Secretary of State,
now candidate for Congress for Sarasota, settled with the NAACP, agreeing
that
legal voters had been mistakenly purged, but admitting no wrongdoing.

Here's where it gets nasty. Harris and the state admit that tens of
thousands
of black voters had been wronged, and with plantation noblesse have agreed
to
return them to the voter rolls -- at the beginning of 2003. In other words,
the votes seized in November 2002 will not be emancipated until after the
ballots are counted in the race between Governor Jeb Bush and his Democratic
opponent Bill McBride.

Is there some technical reason for the delay? The first purge was launched
in
1998 only weeks before Jeb's last run for office; yet the order to reverse
the
process is dragging for months since settlement and nearly two years since
the
exposure of the list's falsity.

Not all of the 91,000 wrongly listed for the purge lost their vote; and
most,
though not all, are Democrats. But in a Governor's race in a statistical
dead
heat, these tens of thousands of votes may well decide the outcome.

THE BLACK BUTTON

Nevertheless, that doesn't seem enough for the Republican controllers of the
state's voting apparatus. In the 2000 race, despite the odd statement by
Republican spokesman James Baker that Florida's votes were counted six
times,
in fact, just short of 180,000 ballots were never tallied -- "spoiled" in
the
parlance of elections officials.

How does a vote "spoil"? Is it left out of the refrigerator too long? In
Florida, a spoiled ballot is one that is mis-marked -- especially easy to do
with the paper ballots used throughout much of Florida. While the nation was
chortling over "butterfly" ballots and "hanging chads," the race was decided
by the machines that optically read the paper ballots. It's hard to imagine
a
machine with a racial bias, but they can be programmed for Jim Crow outcome.

Here's how it happened. Take two counties: Gadsden, Florida's most heavily
African-American county (57% minority population) and white-majority Leon
County (which includes the capital, Tallahassee). Both counties used paper
ballots; both were read by machines. But in the black county one in eight
votes was "spoiled" -- voided and never read; while in next-door Leon,
almost
no ballot went uncounted (a spoilage rate of only one in two-hundred).

The 180,000 spoiled ballots came overwhelmingly from the blackest, poorest,
most Democratic counties. How could that be?  ABC TV's Nightline sent down
their Clark Kents to investigate -- and they concluded that African-American
voters were not properly educated and trained to handle the sophisticated
voting process. In other words, blacks are too dumb to figure out how to
vote.


I found another explanation while investigating the matter for BBC TV
Newsnight out of London. The Leon County officials showed me that in their
(white) county, if a voter made an error, the machine automatically returned
the ballot and issued a new one for correction.  However, if the black
voters
of Gadsden made a minor error -- a stray mark, a circle not an x -- their
machine accepted the ballot, then voided it; the reject mechanisms were
either
missing or disabled.

This was no surprise mistake -- Leon County election clerks told me that
before the election, they set up example machines at their office across
from
the Governor's office, and his election chiefs thoroughly examined how the
machines operated.

Florida officials are considering an end to this mechanical apartheid; the
issue will be addressed some time after the November race.

COUP D'ETAT BY COMPUTER

But the old dogs of ballot-bending are learning some new tricks. Before
resigning to run for Congress, Secretary of State Harris leaned hard on the
counties to purchase "touch screen" voting machines. But not just any
machines. Harris first authorized the use of machines by only one company,
Election Systems & Software of Omaha. While Harris later authorized others,
ES&S used its jump ahead to work an agreement with the association of county
elections supervisors to kick back to the group five percent of the cost of
new machines purchased by any county.

It was ES&S machines that were used in Florida's 2002 primaries and were
plagued by countless breakdowns. A report by state Inspector General
Christopher Mazzella says that the company "bears major responsibility" for
the foul-ups. An ACLU study found that, once again, it was Miami-Dade's
black
voters who were disproportionately disenfranchised by "lost votes."

Who is behind ES&S that its way into Florida seemed so well lubricated? Its
lobbyist: Sandra Mortham. Mortham is the frothingly partisan predecessor to
Harris as secretary of state, a founding member of Women for Jeb and the
official who in 1998, before Harris, promoted and carried out the first
round
of the fake felon purge. If Mortham's credentials as an unbiased source of
corrective voting mechanisms are a bit questionable, ES&S's track record for
reliability should have caused some concern. From Hawaii to Venezuela, there
have been questions about the company's machines.

In early voting during the week of October 21, voters in Dallas County,
Texas,
complained that ES&S touch-screen machines were registering Democratic votes
as votes for Republican candidates. This might affect one of the most
important Senate races in the country, between Democrat Ron Kirk and
Republican John Cornyn.

It was no surprise to me that ES&S machines failed. I tried the test ballot
on
the company web site, and despite their supposedly reliable system, still
succeeded in "overvoting" and voting twice for the same candidate -- until
their site seized up. Nor is it surprising that problems with the touch
screen
voting occurred mostly in African-American precincts.

* * *

This story appears in a special edition of Southern Exposure magazine, "The
Right To Vote." Copies are available for $5 at Southern Exposure, P.O. Box
531, Durham, NC 27702 or (919) 419-8311 x21. The full version of this story
will appear in the winter 2002/2003 issue of Southern Exposure.

Greg Palast is an award-winning BBC reporter who has also written for Salon,
Harper's, and the Washington Post. In February, Penguin Plume will issue a
special U.S. edition of Palast's book, The Best Democracy Money Can Buy,
with
the latest on his investigation of vote manipulation in Florida. Fredda
Weinberg contributed to this report.
 
"We see the unhistorical and ahistorical character of bourgeois thought most strikingly when we consider the problem of the present as a historical problem."
 
-George Lukacs


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