November 12, 2004
Worst Voter Error Is Apathy Toward
Irregularities
By Donna Britt
Is anyone surprised that accusations of voter
disenfranchisement and irregularities abound after the most
passionately contested presidential campaign in memory? Is
anybody stunned that the mainstream media appear largely
unconcerned?
To many people's thinking, too few citizens were
discouraged from voting to matter. Those people would
suggest that not nearly enough votes for John Kerry were
missed or siphoned away to overturn President Bush's win. To
which I'd respond:
Excuse me -- I thought this was America.
Informed that I was writing about voter
disenfranchisement, a Democratic friend admitted, "I'm
trying not to care about that." I understand. Less than
two weeks after a bruising election in a nation in which
it's unfashionable to overtly care about anything, it's
annoying of me even to notice.
But citizens who insist, election after election, that
each vote is sacred and then shrug at hundreds of credible
reports that honest-to-God votes were suppressed and
discouraged aren't just being hypocritical.
They're telling the millions who never vote because
"it doesn't matter anyway" that they're the smart
ones.
Come on. If Republicans had lost the election, this
column would be unnecessary because Karl Rove and company
would be contesting every vote. I keep hearing from those
who wonder whether Democrats are "too nice," and
from others who wonder whether efforts by the mainstream
media to be "fair and balanced" sometimes render
them "neutered and less effective."
Perhaps. But the much-publicized voting-machine error
that gave Bush 4,258 votes in an Ohio precinct where only
638 people cast ballots preceded a flood of disturbing
reports, ranging from the Florida voting machine that
counted backward to the North Carolina computer that
eliminated votes. In Ohio's Warren County, election
officials citing "homeland security" concerns
locked the doors to the county building where votes were
being counted, refusing to allow members of the media and
bipartisan observers to watch.
Bush won the county overwhelmingly.
Much of the media dismisses anxiety over such
irregularities as grousing by poor-loser Democrats, rabid
conspiracy theorists and pouters frustrated by Kerry's
lightning-quick concession. Some of it surely is.
But more people's concerns are elementary-school basic --
which isn't coincidental since that's where many of us
learned about democracy. We feel that Americans mustn't
concede the noble intentions upon which our nation was
founded to the cynical or the indifferent. We believe in our
nation's sacred assurance that every citizen's voice be
heard through his or her vote.
The point isn't just which candidate won or lost. It's
that we all lose when we ignore that thousands of Americans
might have been discouraged or prevented from voting, or not
had their votes count.
If it were us, we'd be screaming bloody murder.
Yesterday, Lafayette Square was the scene of a lively
rally at which dozens of upbeat, mostly older-than-25
protesters organized by ReDefeatBush.com heard
democracy-praising singers, rappers and speakers. Protester
Susan Ribe, 33, a Wheaton tax researcher, said that though
she's "open-minded" to the possibility that
election results might be correct, she believes that reports
of irregularities suggest "there's the need for a
serious investigation."
Election Protection, the nonpartisan coalition of civil
rights organizations that sent 25,000 poll monitors across
the nation to ensure that registered voters could cast their
ballots, received hundreds of reports of Election Day
abuses.
Some were from voters who said they repeatedly pressed
the "Kerry" button on their electronic voting
screens, only to have "Bush" keep lighting up.
Others said that though they pushed "Kerry," they
were asked to confirm their "Bush" vote. There
were calls about a Broward County, Fla., roadblock that
denied voters access to precincts in predominantly black
districts, and reports from hundreds who said they'd
registered weeks before Florida's October deadline yet
weren't on the rolls.
Why aren't more Americans exercised about this issue?
Maybe the problem is who's being disenfranchised -- usually
poor and minority voters. In a recent poll of black and
white adults by Harvard University professor Michael Dawson,
37 percent of white respondents said that widely publicized
reports of attempts to prevent blacks from voting in the
2000 election were a Democratic "fabrication."
More disturbingly, nearly one-quarter of whites surveyed
said that if such attempts were made, they either
were "not a problem" (9 percent) or "not so
big a problem" (13 percent).
Excuse me?
Electronic, paper-trail-free voting is a danger to
democracy that the United States can, and I believe will,
address. But not giving a damn about fellow citizens' votes?
Election Protection volunteer Bernestine Singley, a
Texas-based writer-lawyer I know, was torn between elation
and outrage on Nov. 2 as she monitored polls in three
Florida precincts. Inspiring to Singley were hundreds of
volunteers, most of them white, who'd traveled hundreds of
miles to ensure the inclusion of minority voters. She felt
stirred by scores of young, black voters whose attitude, she
says, was, "I don't care how long I have to stand in
line before I do what I came here to do."
Singley's outrage was sparked by clearly hostile white
poll workers, and the police officer who stood -- illegally
-- by a polling place door, hand on his revolver.
Did I mention the guy who shoved her?
After watching Singley assist voters for hours, a
scowling, white-haired 70-something poll worker
patronizingly suggested that she was not a poll monitor.
When she replied that he knew exactly what she was doing, he
rammed his chest into hers, shoving her backward.
Pushing right back, Singley told the man, "You
better get off me." He did. Minutes later, Singley says
the man told another poll worker within her hearing: "I
don't know why she thinks I know who she is. They all look
alike to me."
Excuse me -- is this 2004 or 1954?
Ironically, if all Americans did look alike -- if
"black" and "white" and "poor"
and "well-to-do" didn't exist -- outrages such as
those would happen much less often.
When they did, many more Americans would fight to ensure
they never happened again.
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