By Greg Palast06/23/06 "The
Guardian" -- --
Don't kid yourself: the Republican party's decision
yesterday to "delay"
the renewal of the Voting Rights Act has not a darn
thing to do with objections of the Republican's
white sheets caucus.
Complaints by a couple of
good ol' boys to legislation have never stopped the
GOP leadership from rolling over dissenters.
This is a strategic stall that is meant to
decriminalise the Republican party's new game of
challenging voters of colour by the hundreds of
thousands.
In the 2004 presidential race, the GOP ran a
massive, multi-state, multimillion-dollar operation
to challenge the legitimacy of black, Hispanic and
Native American voters. The methods used breached
the Voting Rights Act, and while the Bush
administration's civil rights division grinned and
looked the other way, civil rights lawyers began
circling, preparing to sue to stop the violations of
the act before the 2008 race.
So Republicans have promised to no longer break the
law - not by going legit but by eliminating the law.
The act was passed in 1965 after the Ku Klux Klan
and other upright citizens found they could use
procedural tricks - "literacy tests", poll taxes and
more - to block citizens of colour from casting
ballots.
Here is what happened in 2004, and what's in store
for 2008.
In the 2004 election, more than 3 million voters
were challenged at the polls. No one had seen
anything like it since the era of Jim Crow and
burning crosses. In 2004, voters were told their
registrations had been purged or that their
addresses were "suspect".
Denied the right to the regular voting booths, these
challenged voters were given "provisional" ballots.
More than 1m of these provisional ballots (1,090,729
of them) were tossed in the electoral dumpster
uncounted.
A funny thing about those ballots: about 88% were
cast by minority voters.
This isn't a number dropped on me from a black
helicopter: they come from the raw data of the US
election assistance commission in Washington DC.
At the heart of the GOP's mass challenge of voters
was what the party's top brass called "caging lists"
- secret files of hundreds of thousands of voters,
almost every one from a black-majority voting
precinct.
When our investigations team, working for BBC TV,
got our hands on these confidential files in October
2004, the Republicans told us the voters listed were
their potential "donors". Really? The sheets
included pages of men from homeless shelters in
Florida.
Donor lists, my ass. Every expert told us, these
were "challenge lists" meant to stop these black
voters from casting ballots.
When these "caged" voters arrived at the polls in
November 2004, they found their registrations
missing, their right to vote blocked or their
absentee ballots rejected because their addresses
were supposedly "fraudulent".
Why didn't the GOP honchos fess up to challenging
these allegedly illegal voters? Because targeting
voters of colour is against the law. The law in
question is the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
The act says you can't go after groups of voters if
you choose your targets based on race. Given that
almost all the voters on the GOP hit list are black,
the illegal racial profiling is beyond even Karl
Rove's ability to come up with an alibi.
The Republicans target black folk not because they
don't like the colour of their skin; they don't like
the colour of their vote: Democrat. For that reason,
the GOP included on its hit list Jewish retirement
homes in Florida. Apparently, the GOP was also
gunning for the Elderly of Zion.
These so-called "fraudulent" voters, in fact, were
not fraudulent at all. Page after page, as we have
previously reported, are black soldiers sent
overseas. The Bush campaign used their absence from
their US homes to accuse them of voting from false
addresses.
Now that the GOP has been caught breaking the voting
rights law, it has found a way to keep using its
expensively obtained "caging" lists: let the law
expire next year. If the Voting Rights Act dies in
2007, the 2008 race will be open season on
dark-skinned voters. Only the renewal of the Voting
Rights Act can prevent the planned racial wrecking
of democracy.
Before the 2000 presidential ballot, then Jeb
Bush purged thousands of Black citizens'
registrations on the grounds that they were "felons"
not entitled to vote. Our review of the files
determined that the crime of most people on the list
was nothing more than VWB -- Voting While Black.
That "felon scrub", as the state called it, had to
be "pre-cleared" under the Voting Rights Act. That
is, the US justice department must approve "scrubs"
and other changes in procedures.
The Florida felon scrub slipped through this
"pre-clearance" provision because Katherine Harris's
assistant assured the government the scrub was just
a clerical matter. Civil rights lawyers are now on
the alert for such mendacity.
The burning cross caucus of the Republican Party is
bitching that "pre-clearance" of voting changes
applies only to southern states. I have to agree
that singling out the old confederacy is a bit
unfair. But the solution is not to smother the
voting rights law but to spread its safeguards to
all 50 of these United States.
Republicans argue that the racial voting games
and the threats of the white-hooded Klansmen that
kept African-Americans from the ballot box before
the 1965 passage of the Voting Rights Act no longer
threaten black voters.
That's true. When I look over the "caging lists" and
the "scrub sheets", it's clear to me that the GOP
has traded in white sheets for spreadsheets.
Greg Palast is the author of
Armed Madhouse: Who’s Afraid of Osama Wolf?, China
Floats Bush Sinks, the Scheme to Steal ‘08, No
Child’s Behind Left and other Dispatches from the
Front Lines of the Class War
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