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[A-List] US election: Rev Jesse Jackson writes
In Cleveland as in Kiev
Jesse Jackson
Wednesday December 8, 2004
The Guardian
In the Ukraine, citizens are in the streets protesting what they charge is a
fixed election. Secretary of State Colin Powell expresses this nation's
concern about apparent voting irregularities. The media give the dispute
around-the-clock coverage. But in the United States, massive and systemic
voter irregularities go unreported and unnoticed.
Ohio is this election year's Florida. The vote in Ohio decided the
presidential race, but it was marred by intolerable, and often partisan,
irregularities and discrepancies. US citizens have as much reason as those
in Kiev to be concerned that the fix was in.
Ohio determines the election. But because of mounting irregularities, the
vote in this state was not certified until this Monday, 34 days after the
election. People of conscience demand that a full and complete investigation
of these irregularities is undertaken.
Their outrage is made intolerable by the fact that the secretary of state in
charge of the count, Ken Blackwell, holds, like the disreputable Katherine
Harris of Florida's fiasco in 2000, a dual role: he is secretary of state
with control over voting procedures and co-chair of George Bush's Ohio
campaign.
This foul and ugly conflict of interest is unacceptable - and made grotesque
by the voting irregularities in the state. A thorough investigation, count
and recount of Ohio's vote should be made.
Blackwell reversed the rules on provisional ballots that were in place in
the spring 2004 primaries. These allowed voters to cast provisional ballots
anywhere in their county, even if they were in the wrong precinct,
reflecting the chief rationale for provisional ballots - to ensure that
those who went to the wrong place by mistake could have their votes cast and
counted.
But Blackwell ruled belatedly and bizarrely that voters could cast
provisional ballots only at the proper precinct. Unsurprisingly, this was to
disqualify disproportionately ballots cast in heavily Democratic Cuyahoga
County.
Blackwell also permitted the use of electronic machines. In one precinct in
Franklin County, an electric voting system gave Bush 3,893 extra votes out
of a total of 638 votes cast. Votes are counted in a secret electronic
program created by a private corporation, Diebold Co, headed by a Bush
partisan, under the supervision of a state election official who co-chairs
the Bush campaign. There is no paper record, no way to audit the votes, no
way to do a recount.
Blackwell also presided over a voting system that resulted in quick, short
lines in the dominantly Republican suburbs, and four-hour and longer waiting
lines in the inner cities. Wealthy precincts received ample numbers of
voting machines andvoting places. Democratic precincts received inadequate
numbers of machines in too few polling places that were often hard to
locate; this caused day-long waits for working people who could least afford
the time.
Then there is the count itself, that smells like a rotten fish. In Ohio, as
in Florida and Pennsylvania, there was a stark disconnect between the exit
polls and the tabulated results - the former favouring John Kerry, the
latter Bush. The chance of this occurring in these three states, according
to Professor Steven Freeman of the University of Pennsylvania, is about 250
million toone.
It gets worse. In one of dozens of examples, Ellen Connally, an
African-American supreme court candidate running an underfunded race at the
bottom of the ticket, received over 100,000 more votes than Kerry in four
counties. She ran better than Kerry in areas where she wasn't known and
didn't campaign, than she did where she was known and did.
There should be a federal investigation of the count in Ohio and a recount
should be done where possible, supervised by neutral officials. In
Cleveland, as in Kiev, citizens have the right to know that the election is
run fairly and every vote counted. Citizens have the right to election
officials who try to facilitate voting, not impede it. Citizens have the
right to voting machines that keep a paper record and allow for an
independent audit and recount.
This country needs no more Floridas and Ohios. We call for a constitutional
amendment to guarantee the right to vote for all US citizens and to empower
Congress to establish federal standards and non-partisan administration of
elections. Harris and Blackwell are insults to the people they represent,
and stains upon the president whose election they sought to insure.
Democracy should not be for export only.
· Jesse Jackson is president of the Rainbow/Push coalition, which is
supporting the legal action to secure a recount in Ohio. A version of this
article first appeared in the Chicago Sun Times
- Thread context:
- [A-List] Interesting account of the US convict-leasing program,
Erik Freye Thu 09 Dec 2004, 05:42 GMT
- [A-List] Putin urges Russia-India-China alliance,
Erik Freye Thu 09 Dec 2004, 05:42 GMT
- [A-List] Hubbert's Peak: The Impending World Oil Shortage,
Bill Totten Thu 09 Dec 2004, 03:12 GMT
- [A-List] GI whistle-blower treated like madman,
Craven, Jim Wed 08 Dec 2004, 17:42 GMT
- [A-List] US election: Rev Jesse Jackson writes,
Michael Keaney Wed 08 Dec 2004, 06:59 GMT
- [A-List] UK economy: New Labour's social inclusion,
Michael Keaney Wed 08 Dec 2004, 06:57 GMT
- [A-List] Iraq: Lancet article controversy,
Michael Keaney Wed 08 Dec 2004, 06:55 GMT
- [A-List] Iraq: the quagmire deepens,
Michael Keaney Wed 08 Dec 2004, 06:50 GMT
- [A-List] The New Israel,
Jim Farmelant Wed 08 Dec 2004, 01:27 GMT
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