By Molly McCracken
November 24/25, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - With next
year’s presidential election drawing ever closer,
and impeachment proceedings going forward against
current leader Donald Trump, American citizens are
facing existential questions about the nature of
their democracy. The United States was founded on
the promise of revolution – a war was fought and won
on the rejection of the Old World’s hierarchical
societies, and the glass ceilings that inhibited the
freedom and progression of the non-ruling classes.
America’s demonstrative patriotism is, in fact,
often startling to outsiders. The pledge of
allegiance, national anthem, and ubiquity of the
flag build up a sense of American exceptionalism at
the heart of public culture, fundamentally woven
into daily life, and rooted in the belief that the
nation offers a unique promise unmatched in other
countries. Yet, the very ideals of democratic
inclusion on which the United States celebrates
itself is increasingly at risk. Despite the promise
that all men are created equal – affirmed in the
Declaration of Independence as the nation wrote
itself into being – political manoeuvrings over the
past few years reflect the sustained challenges of
transforming that equality from an aspiration into a
reality.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
Reports and studies have suggested
that there are significant voter
suppression tactics occurring as we
speak, with a noteworthy spike in
efforts rising since Trump’s election in
2016. Such strategies are largely
designed to shape electoral maps in
favour of incumbent public officials and
candidates running for the Republican
Party. Some might argue that this is
simply how politics works: those in
power will do what they can to maintain
it, and strategies such as
gerrymandering are coeval with democracy
itself. A closer examination of these
techniques, and the populations they
target, however, reveals the underlying
biases that remain a fundamental
impediment to genuine equality. Despite
the promise of one person, one vote,
recent efforts by the Republican Party
have disproportionately sought to strip
the right to vote from African Americans
and people of colour (who typically vote
for the Democrats) across the nation.
Such policies reflect a deep-rooted thread of
racism at the heart of American politics – a wound
that has festered since the nation shaped itself
through slavery and, in academic George Lipsitz’s
words, the possessive investment in whiteness as
cultural capital. The systemic racism of
disenfranchisement can be traced through America’s
history: under slavery, the Constitution included a
clause that valued black lives at the rate of ⅗ of
whites’, adjusting population counts to increase the
wealth and voting power of slaveholders. After the
Civil War, Jim Crow legislation suppressed the
supposedly liberated black vote by making voting
near-impossible through segregation, violence, and
prohibitive requirements. One of the outrages of the
2016 elections was the clarity with which such
strategies have been resurrected. Georgia’s
Democratic candidate Stacey Abrams amassed
unprecedented success as an underdog, calling
attention to the 1.5 million voters disenfranchised
by her Republican competitor Brian Kemp. Despite a
narrow loss, she has expanded her voter registration
campaign nation-wide to encourage people of colour
to participate in elections. In Florida, Democratic
Gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum lead a
successful campaign to restore voting rights to
ex-felons – an outcome that enables over 1 million
formerly disenfranchised people to vote, against a
staggering near 18 per cent of the state’s black
population who had been politically excluded.
Indeed, while scholar Michelle Alexander defines the
‘new Jim Crow’ in response to the overwhelming
incarceration of African Americans, there are clear
links between this imprisonment and the desire among
some policymakers to exclude the black population
from public society.
This information is and should be terrifying in
the context of a nation that prides itself on an
ideal of freedom. Such outrage is also a moment of
reckoning, however, and could signal a true shift in
public involvement in democracy. The rapid success
of a group of new candidates, like Abrams and Gillum,
who speak truth to power against voter suppression
shows the increasing confidence of an empowered
electorate that refuses to be silenced. As America
prepares for its next national vote, it is for
voters, and more importantly, policymakers and
candidates, to continue the fight to finally bring
truth to the Founding Fathers’ promise that all
Americans are equal. As the Democratic successes in
2016 show, the gradual erosion of voter rights
long-occurring in America cannot last.
This article was originally published by "The
Student Newspaper" -
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