Originally published in the Chicago Sun Times on October 5, 2004 [here ]
BY JESSE JACKSON
Aaron McGruder's ''Boondocks'' got it right. A recent cartoon strip
showed Donald Rumsfeld talking about how an ''election in only
three-fourths or four-fifths of the country, for whatever reason''
would be ''better than not having an election at all.'' ''And now,''
Rumsfeld says, ''I'd like to switch gears and talk about Iraq.''
In the United States, we are less than a month away from the election,
and already it is clear that strenuous efforts are being made to
intimidate, impede and obstruct the vote of minorities, particularly
African Americans. If the intimidators have their way, we'll have a
vote in which as much as a fourth of the country's citizens will have
to overcome barriers in order to vote. Iraq will have nothing on us.
Voter suppression has been a technique used by both parties. But today
the Republican Party, which built its majority by becoming a
whites-only party across the South, has a particular stake in
suppressing the minority vote. Republicans know that if African
Americans and Latinos vote in large numbers, their race-bait politics
becomes a liability, not a strength. So they are unleashing the modern
version of Jim Crow voter suppression techniques. Consider the
following:
*In Florida -- yes Florida once more -- Gov. Jeb Bush and his partisan
election commissioner tried to to exclude thousands of African
Americans who weren't felons from voting based on a biased list of
felons, while having virtually no Cuban Americans on the list. (They
tend to vote Republican). Bush has also insisted on using voting
machines that have no paper record and are easily manipulated.
Former President Jimmy Carter said he could not serve as an election
observer in Florida because the governor's system failed to meet
minimal international standards for free elections. The Civil Rights
Commission reported that in 2000, black voters in Florida were 10 times
more likely to have their ballots rejected and were often prevented
from voting because their names were erroneously purged from
registration lists.
*In the swing state of Michigan this summer, Republican state Rep. John
Pappageorge was quoted in the Detroit Free Press as saying, ''If we do
not suppress the Detroit vote, we're going to have a tough time in this
election.'' African Americans make up 83 percent of Detroit's
population.
*In the critical state of Ohio, the Republican election official,
facing a record wave of voter registration in minority communities,
ruled that no registrations would be accepted if not printed on thick,
80-pound stock paper.
*In hotly contested South Dakota's June 2004 primary, Native Americans
were prevented from voting when they couldn't provide photo IDs, which
they were not required to present under state or federal law.
*In Kentucky this July, even black Republican officials objected to
their state party chairman's plans to place ''vote challengers'' in
African-American precincts.
*In majority black colleges across the South, students are too often
told erroneously that they can't vote where they go to school. Earlier
this year in Waller County, Texas, a local district attorney told
students at a majority black college that they were not eligible to
vote in the county where the school is located -- the same county where
26 years earlier, a federal court order was required to prevent
discrimination against the students.
The Justice Department should be aggressively investigating these
outrages under the Voting Rights Act. But Attorney General John
Ashcroft is a right-wing Republican partisan who is no stranger to
voter suppression. As governor of Missouri, he vetoed two efforts to
correct biased registration provisions between St. Louis County (then
mostly white) and St. Louis City (half African American).
The Kerry campaign and outside groups are organizing voter protection
efforts and batteries of lawyers to help those who have their right to
vote challenged. But Jim Crow tactics get reversed only when their
victims organize and move together. We need a new movement for voting
rights in this country. Those who seek to tamper with this basic right
are unfit for office.
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.