- Originally published in the New York Times on September 14, 2004 [here ]
By Bob Herbert
More than 80 percent of the population of Detroit is black. This is
very well understood by John Pappageorge, who is white and a Republican
state legislator in Michigan. ``If we do not suppress the Detroit
vote,'' said Pappageorge, ``we're going to have a tough time in this
election.''
Oops! Republicans aren't supposed to actually say they want to suppress
black votes. That's so retro. It's so Jim Crow. This is the 21st
century, and the thing now is to do the dastardly deed, but never ever
acknowledge it.
That's where our friend Pappageorge went wrong.
After his startling quote was published several weeks ago in the
Detroit Free Press, Pappageorge, who is 73, apologized and said he
certainly never meant to suggest that anything racist or illegal take
place. But he reiterated to me in a phone conversation last Friday that
he did indeed mean that the vote in Detroit needed to be kept down.
A lot of other Republicans have similar views about the vote in areas
with large black populations. Most blacks vote Democratic. If those
votes can be suppressed, Republicans benefit. And there is increasing
evidence that a big effort to suppress the vote among blacks and some
other heavily Democratic voting groups is under way, which is why it is
important to keep the following phone number handy:
1-866-OUR VOTE.
That's a hot line set up by the Election Protection Coalition, a group
that was formed to identify and stamp out attempts to disenfranchise
voters, especially in predominantly black and Latino precincts around
the country.
On Election Day in November, the coalition expects to have as many as
25,000 volunteers, including 5,000 lawyers, available to provide
assistance to voters who encounter irregularities or feel they are not
being treated fairly at the polls. Voters who call the hot line will
immediately be put in touch with volunteers in their local area.
The coalition is also urging people to call the hot line now if they
are aware of efforts to discourage or prevent people from voting.
Among the groups included in the Election Protection Coalition are the
People for the American Way Foundation, the Lawyers' Committee on Civil
Rights, the League of Women Voters, the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People, the American Civil Liberties Union and
the Advancement Project, a civil rights advocacy group in Washington.
The attempt to prevent blacks from voting has been a staple of
America's political history, like long-winded speeches and balloons. I
wrote three columns last month about a situation in Orlando, Fla., in
which armed state police officers went into the homes of elderly black
voters to question them as part of a so-called criminal investigation
involving absentee ballots. This tactic sent a definite chill through
voters who were old enough to remember the torment inflicted on
Southern blacks who tried to vote in the 1950s and '60s.
A new study by the People for the American Way Foundation and the NAACP
describes many recent examples of voter harassment and intimidation --
the latest entries in the long and sordid history of disenfranchisement
in the United States. The study, called ``The Long Shadow of Jim
Crow,'' noted:
``Voter intimidation and suppression efforts have not been limited to a
single party, but have in fact shifted over time as voting allegiances
have shifted. In recent decades, African-American voters have largely
been loyal to the Democratic Party, resulting in the prevalence of
Republican efforts to suppress minority turnout.''
In Texas, students at the predominantly black Prairie View A&M
University were threatened with arrest by the local district attorney,
a Republican, who suggested they were not eligible to vote in the
county in which the school was located. This was nonsense. Students can
vote in their college towns if they designate the campus as their home
address. The whole point, of course, was intimidation. The threat of
arrest is an excellent way of deterring someone from voting.
There are endless stories of attempts to discourage blacks from voting.
Few get substantial publicity, so this is not seen as a big national
problem. It deserves a brighter spotlight. When duly registered blacks
are improperly challenged at the polls, or Florida tries to use a
patently discriminatory voter felons list, or black votes are
criminally tampered with or simply not counted at all -- something
should be done.
The number to call is 1-866-OUR VOTE.
Bob Herbert is a columnist for the New York Times.