Jesse Jackson: Senators should object to Ohio vote
Thursday, January 6, 2005 at 08:42AM
TheSpook
This Thursday in Washington Rep. John
Conyers (D-Mich.), the senior minority member of the House Judiciary
Committee, will formally object to the counting of the Ohio electoral
vote in the 2004 presidential election. If any senator joins him, the
counting of the vote is suspended and the House and the Senate must
convene separately to hear the objections filed, and to vote on whether
to accept them. The grounds for the objections are clear: The
irregularities in the Ohio vote and vote count are widespread and
blatant. If the Ohio election were held in the Ukraine, it would not
have been certified by the international community. Ohio's
secretary of state, the inappropriately partisan head of the state's
Bush campaign, has resisted any systematic recount of the ballots. The
systematic bias and potential for fraud is unmistakable. An in-depth
investigation is vital -- and the partisan secretary of state has
opposed it every step of the way. In this context, Conyers and his
colleagues in the House are serving the nation's best interests in
demanding an investigation of the irregularities in Ohio, and objecting
to business as usual in counting the vote. If Harry Reid, the new
leader of the Democratic minority in the Senate, has any sense, he will
lead members of the caucus to support their colleagues from the House
and demand a debate that will expose the irregularities in Ohio. If
Kerry wants to establish his continued leadership, he will stand first
to join with Conyers and demand a debate. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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