Jesse Jackson & Greg Palast: Black voters in United States Disproportionally Disenfranchised
Saturday, January 29, 2005 at 10:04PM
TheSpook
The inaugural confetti
has been swept away and with it, the last quarrel over who really won
the presidential election. But there is still unfinished business that
can't be swept away. After taking his oath, the president called for a
"concerted effort to promote democracy." The president should begin
with the United States. More than 133,000 votes remain uncounted in
Ohio, more than George W. Bush's supposed margin of victory. In New
Mexico, the uncounted vote totals at least three times the president's
plurality -- and so on in other states. The challenge to the vote count
is over, but the matter of how the United States counts votes, or fails
to count them, remains. The ballots left uncounted, and that will never
be counted, are so-called spoiled or rejected ballots -- votes cast by
citizens, but never tallied. This is the dark little secret of U.S.
democracy: Nationwide, in our presidential elections, about 2 million
votes are cast and never counted, most spoiled because they cannot be
read by the tallying machines. Not everyone's vote spoils equally.
Cleveland State University Professor Mark Salling analyzed ballots
thrown into Ohio's electoral garbage can. Salling found that,
"overwhelmingly," the voided votes come from African American
precincts. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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