Departments
Critical US Supreme Court ruling against Rovian GOP vote meddling may prove temporary
by Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
October 20, 2008
A critical US Supreme Court decision against GOP voter meddling in Ohio may prove temporary.
In its on-going campaign to inject chaos and confusion into the voting process, the GOP has sued Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner, demanding that she release to county boards of elections lists of registered voters whose information does not precisely match government data bases. The right to vote of such registrants---by most estimates as many as 200,000 in Ohio alone---could then be challenged on a case-by-case basis. George W. Bush was awarded Ohio's 20 electoral votes in 2004 with an official margin of less than 119,000 votes, though more than 100,000 votes cast in that election remain uncounted.
The 200,000 voters targeted by the Republican Party were all registered since January 1, 2008. News source estimates suggest 75-80% of these newly-registered voters are Obama supporters.
Brunner, a Democrat, has argued that the process of sorting through the minutiae of the registration discrepancies and forcing the use of provisional ballots would cause mass confusion, and would do nothing to legitimize the vote count. By all accounts, the discrepancies are usually caused by typographical errors in numbers entered for the Social Security administration and the Bureau of Motor Vehicles. Rarely do such discrepancies indicate fraudulent behavior or illegitimate registrations.
Last week, after a twisted back-and-forth trail of contradictory lower court decisions, the Supremes ruled that the Republicans "are not sufficiently likely to prevail" in their argument that such discrepancies pose a significant threat to the legitimacy of the electoral process. The Court also ruled that the GOP had not standing as a private organization to file such a suit.
The decision pertains to Ohio, but could have major national impact. Throughout the US, the GOP has been working to strip voters from registration rolls and challenge voting rights predominantly in districts leaning toward the Democrats. Our next article will include an estimate of how many voters that campaign could actually disenfranchise in Ohio.
But the GOP continues to seek ways to disrupt the registration and voting process. In a separate case, the Ohio Supreme Court has ruled 4-3 that the Secretary of State must allow partisan observers into voting stations where early voting is proceeding. Outside the early voting sites, Republican operatives have photographed early voters and recorded their license plates in an attempt to intimidate and challenge new voters.
The idea of massive fraud by voters continues to be proven as a hyped-up myth. The Cincinnati Enquirer has provided a detailed analysis of Ohio’s more than 8 million registered voters and found that problems involving illegitimate voting are minimal. The Enquirer found only 6567 voters who had duplicate registrations. All are individuals who registered twice at their own address, a common routinely resolved by election officials and poll workers. An investigation by Dr. Richard Hayes Phillips of the 2004 election found that of the nearly 800 duplicate registrations he analyzed, none voted more than once. The Enquirer also flagged 589 registered voters who won’t be 18 on Election Day.
So contrary to Republican hype, overall the total number of problematic voters appears to be miniscule. The Enquirer concluded that “Data-entry errors make matching voters to other databases an inexact science. Variations on first names, maiden names, and misspellings could red-flag an otherwise eligible voter.”
On the other hand, several female Ohio voters have contacted the Free Press asking why the Republican Party would send them absentee ballot forms under maiden names they hadn’t used in years. Two of the women feared that they were being targeted for challenges at the polls, since they had a history of voting Democratic.
Since 1953, only six Ohioans have been sent to prison for voter fraud, according to the Columbus Dispatch. But Republican sheriffs and prosecutors are in the midst of a partisan witch hunt the likes of which hasn’t been seen since the 1960s in the Deep South. to harass, arrest and prosecute voting rights groups registering new voters.
In Franklin County, Republican prosecutor Ron O’Brien has issued subpoenas to 13 voters linked to a 527 group – Vote from Home. Joe Deters, a disgraced Republican former state treasurer now Hamilton County prosecutor, has opened a similar investigation.
Greene County Sheriff Gene Fischer opened an investigation of 304 new voters, mostly college students, prompting Columbus's African-American mayor Michael B. Coleman to write, “Whether a buffoonish mistake or partisan scheme gone wrong, there’s no excuse for such blatant voter intimidation, in which young college students are told they may have to go through a sheriff’s investigation just because they registered and voted in Ohio.”
The FBI has also opened an investigation of ACORN, the national grassroots organization established in 1970. ACORN has registered some 1.3 million new voters this year, and has become a whipping boy for the GOP nation-wide anti-voter campaign.
This bizarre hysteria against “voter fraud” can be traced directly to the White House and to the McCain campaign. In order to divert attention from voter suppression tactics that helped win Bush the White House in 2000 and 2004, the Bush administration created the myth of "voter fraud." Karl Rove and his political operatives like Mark F. "Thor" Hearne used fake "voting rights" organizations and other obscure groups to finance civil suits and put pressure on the U.S. Department of Justice to bring criminal charges against voter registration organizations. Twelve federal prosecutors were fired by the Bush Administration for refusing to go along with this witch hunt.
Hearne testified before Rep. Bob Ney’s committee at the Ohio House in 2005. Speaking on the last panel, Hearne followed Ohio's Republican Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell, who engaged in a bitter verbal dispute with Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones (D-Cleveland), since deceased. Among other things, Jones accused Blackwell of using his official web site to spread outdated information that may have led prospective voters to wrong voting locations.
Hearne claimed to represent the “non-partisan watchdog” group, the American Center for Voting Rights (ACVR). He did not tell the Congressional committee that the ACVR was newly formed and that he was national election counsel to Bush-Cheney ’04. Hearne’s nonprofit center’s publicist, Jim Dyke, is a former communications director for the Republican National Committee.
Based on scant evidence and a single incident of a volunteer allegedly linked to crack use, Hearne pushed a version of voter fraud in Ohio that directly attacked not only ACORN, but the NAACP, the AFL-CIO and ACT-Ohio. By attacking this combination of groups, Rove and Hearne were targeting the leading forces for registering blacks, poor, union workers and young people in Ohio – those most likely to vote Democratic.
Aided by The Free Enterprise Coalition, a front group connected to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, local Republican operative Mark Rubrick filed an Ohio corrupt practices lawsuit (RICO) against all the voter registration organizations listed above in Wood County.
The civil RICO case, backed by financing from the Free Enterprise Coalition, alleged that the voter registration groups provided ". . . payments made in connections with the violations (in the form of, among other things, 'bounties,' payments or other rewards for collecting and/or processing the registrations including but not limited to illegal drugs, paid to individuals actually engaged in the violations), . . ." At the bottom of the document filed by attorneys Jeffrey Creemer and Douglas Haynam of Shumaker, Loop & Kendrick, a law firm based in Toledo, the following words appear: "jsc\Free Enterprise Coalition\Amended Complaint.doc" calling into question who was behind the lawsuit.
The suit was later quietly withdrawn after election rights attorney Cliff Arnebeck discovered that the Free Enterprise Coalition had indemnified Rubrick and had promised to pay any and all expenses related to his RICO suit. "I told Rubrick in no uncertain terms that his accusations that the NAACP was a criminal organization were false and that the indemnification from the Free Enterprise Coalition wasn't worth the paper it was written on," Arnebeck said.
Elsewhere throughout the US, the Republicans have used caging and a wide range of other tactics to strip as many likely Democratic voters as possible from the voter rolls. More than 308,000 were disenfranchised in Ohio prior to the 2004 election. At least another 170,000 have been eliminated since, an overall total of roughly ten percent of the Ohio electorate. Nearly all those disenfranchised come from heavily Democratic urban areas. Similar disenfranchisements are being reported throughout the US.
In 2007 Brunner succeeded Blackwell as Ohio's Secretary of State. Blackwell also served as co-chair of the Bush-Cheney campaign, and helped choreograph the theft of the Buckeye State electoral votes that tipped the election. Brunner has generally attempted to open the voting process in Ohio 2008, but has met with fierce resistance from the GOP, which still controls the Ohio legislature. Among other things, Brunner's attempt to provide paper ballots for all Ohio voters who want them has been reduced by GOP resistance to just 25% availability. The GOP also resisted early and open voting procedures that have allowed Ohioans to cast their ballots for several weeks now.
This new US Supreme Court decision removes a significant morass of confusion and chaos from the voting process. Many of the myriad discrepancies among official data sources "bear no relationship whatsoever to a voter's eligibility to vote a regular, as opposed to a provisional ballot," Brunner explained. The mismatches "may well be used at the county level unnecessarily to challenge fully qualified voters and severely disrupt the voting process."
Trailing badly for the presidency and nearly all other federal offices, the GOP is desperately seeking other routes to inject chaos into the electoral process. It has filed new motions in front of the Ohio Supreme Court, which has seven Republicans and no Democrats, and was re-shaped by more than $7 million in illegal and anonymous campaign donations linked to the US Chamber of Commerce. With this latest filing, the GOP is clearly hoping to revive this challenge to at least 200,000 Ohio voters, and to make this restrictive and confused process into a standard nationwide. The Republicans continue to deploy challengers to the polls wherever possible, and to foster legal attacks against ACORN in particular and the voter registration process in general.
In Ohio and elsewhere the GOP is desperately seeking a way around this new US Supreme Court decision. In 2000 the high court overruled the Florida Supreme Court in a "one time only" decision that stopped a recount and put George W. Bush in the White House.
But if this surprising new pro-democracy decision holds, it could set important precedent for protection of voter rights and help guarantee a fuller and fairer electoral process this year. If not, the electoral system could be crippled yet again, for years to come.
--
Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman have co-authored four books on election protection, including AS GOES OHIO and HOW THE GOP STOLE AMERICA'S 2004 ELECTION & IS RIGGING 2008, and WHAT HAPPENED IN OHIO, all available a http://freepress.org, where this article first appeared. |
 |
Recent Election Issues Articles
Why Al Franken should NOT be riding private planes December 23, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
The suspicious, disturbing death of election rigger Michael Connell December 20, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Last US House seat filled on grave of stolen 2004 election December 9, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
What happened this year in Ohio December 1, 2008 Pete Johnson
Imaginary numbers persist in our presidential elections November 22, 2008 Richard Hayes Phillips, Ph.D.
The GOP attack on democracy continues in Ohio November 19, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
The 2008 Presidential election: a preliminary analysis November 19, 2008 Richard Hayes Phillips, Ph.D.
Election protection in Ohio (and America) isn't over November 17, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Recount fictions in Virginia's Fifth November 9, 2008 David Swanson
The Pits: Georgia's GOP swipes the Peach State November 6, 2008 Greg Palast
Grant Park on Election Night November 5, 2008 Joan Brunwasser
Can the grassroots Internet-based election protection movement win the White House? November 3, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
How and why I just voted November 2, 2008 David Swanson
No time for Nader: A letter to Nader McKinney voters November 2, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
'Vote stealing imperils democracy': former Montague resident charges election manipulation November 2, 2008 Richie Davis
Will this Presidential election be stolen? It didn’t happen by chance... November 2, 2008 Channing Redditt and Amy Maldonado
The time has come October 30, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Beware the Twin Towers of electronic election theft October 30, 2008 Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
Sarah Palin and the new Apostolic reformation October 28, 2008 Russ Bellant
Antidotes to complacency: four reasons to act October 28, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Redesigning democracy October 22, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
A McCain "win" will be theft: resistance is planned October 21, 2008 David Swanson
Critical US Supreme Court ruling against Rovian GOP vote meddling may prove temporary October 20, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Our national juncture October 17, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Suppression October 17, 2008 Joe Rothstein
Cuyahoga's witch hunt October 13, 2008 Victoria Lovegren, Ph.D.
Videos from Ohio Election Protection Conference October 12, 2008 Free Press Staff
The Palin-Biden debate: high time to move beyond clichés October 11, 2008 Ramzy Baroud
Struggle: A Documentary October 10, 2008 Roger Hill
GOP attacks on American voters turn desperate, ugly and dangerous October 10, 2008 Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
Warming to Palin October 8, 2008 David Swanson
Brace yourself October 8, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Cindy, Charlotte, and our Constitution October 8, 2008 David Swanson
Rainbow PUSH Coalition registers 2090 new voters this week October 6, 2008 Lauren Love
Big presidential vote count error found and fixed in New Mexico October 6, 2008 Steven Rosenfeld
Ohio 2008 opens with a subpoena, a surge and calls for election protection October 1, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
North Carolina: The new Ohio? September 30, 2008 Christopher Bifani
Foreign policy debate all about war September 29, 2008 David Swanson
Be a poll worker and save American democracy September 26, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Why hurricane Ike demands paper ballots on November 4 September 17, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Death becomes her: let's make her our president September 15, 2008 Jason Miller
Ten ways the McCain/Palin GOP is now stealing the Ohio vote September 9, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
John McCain: Morally, mentally, and emotionally unfit September 8, 2008 Jim Fetzer
Logical consequences September 4, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Rovian politics chose Sarah Palin September 3, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Shocking choice by John McCain August 31, 2008 Robert Dewey
Ron Paul endorsement of Don Young "shocking and disappointing" August 27, 2008 Richard A. Viguerie
The DNC platform: belief you can change in August 10, 2008 David Swanson
Obama doesn't sweat. He should. July 29, 2008 Greg Palast
Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr. applauds Sen. Obama’s speech before the NAACP July 16, 2008 Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr.
Three key ways YOU can help protect the 2008 election July 3, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Colleges, voter registration, and a historic opportunity: a more detailed proposal June 19, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Obama must learn from Kucinich's election theft impeachment June 11, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Clinton only needs 153% of remaining delegates June 1, 2008 David Swanson
The buried Florida story: why campaigning matters May 31, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
The myth of Clinton's popular vote lead May 29, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Did the Limbaugh effect also flip Michigan? May 29, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Edwards just put Obama over the top May 15, 2008 David Swanson
Did the Limbaugh effect also flip Michigan? May 14, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Obama-Clinton funny math: Guam update May 4, 2008 David Swanson
Did the US Supreme Court deliver the Indiana Primary to Hillary Clinton? May 2, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Did the US Supreme Court just elect John McCain? April 30, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
The 2008 election will be stolen April 19, 2008 David Swanson
The done deal April 18, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Letter to Hillary: remember when John McCain slimed your daughter April 17, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Fire and race April 3, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Keep the Republic March 27, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
What it's all about... March 25, 2008 Sheila Samples
Can SuperDelegates stop the scorched earth campaigning? March 24, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
An election without meaning March 23, 2008 Peter Phillips
We have a dream March 23, 2008 Phil Tajitsu Nash
Hope, change, and pissing in the wind: "Of Obama, Democrats, and the Power Elite" March 19, 2008 Patrice Greanville and Jason Miller
Ohio's voting machines are now an official crime scene March 17, 2008 Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
Did Republicans give Hillary her victory in Ohio? March 8, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Primary day at the polls in Columbus, Ohio March 5, 2008 David S. Lewis, National Affairs Editor
Obama & Clinton: who's more likely to confront global warming? March 4, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
If you think Karl Rove is evil, make phone calls today March 4, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Obama's talking points March 1, 2008 Gregg Gordon
Adventures in inaudible audio with Senator Barack Obama February 27, 2008 David S. Lewis, National Affairs Editor
Attention all voters: this is a must-see video February 26, 2008 Free Press staff
On the campaign trail in the Buckeye State stalking the candidates: John McCain February 24, 2008 David S. Lewis, National Affairs Editor
Will Clinton's advisors tell her the hard truths? February 22, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
How much damage will Clinton do before she folds? February 22, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
The Hillary nutcracker February 21, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Behind Obama's wave of victories: the more they know him….. February 17, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Hillary's hawks -- How Obama's and Clinton's advisors mirror their stands on the war February 11, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb, introducing a Stephen Zunes article
Poll shows John McCain faces tough road in gaining conservative support February 11, 2008 Richard A. Viguerie
The Obama Factors February 11, 2008 Todd Huffman
Vote against Clinton February 4, 2008 David Swanson
Why this Edwards voter Is now backing Obama February 2, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Liveblogging Obama v. Clinton v. CNN February 1, 2008 David Swanson
It's all about Hillary, not her party January 29, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
The South Carolina you won't see on CNN - South Carolina primary colors: black and white? January 26, 2008 Greg Palast
The South Carolina you won't see on CNN - South Carolina primary colors: black and white? January 26, 2008 Greg Palast
Conspiracy theorist January 24, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Hillary Clinton's sleaze parade January 20, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Bob & Harvey's 3-Step "Ohio Plan" for fair and reliable voting and vote counts January 16, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
Media misses story: Obedwards wins New Hampshire January 11, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Primary concerns January 10, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
Clear evidence of widespread vote fraud in New Hampshire January 10, 2008 Paul Joseph Watson
The Kudzu Effect: The Voting-Industrial Complex chokes our democracy January 6, 2008 Sheri Myers, Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
Still true to ObEdwards: Why I keep donating to both Edwards and Obama January 6, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
Clinton campaign office re-occupied by peace activists on day of Iowa voting January 4, 2008 Mike Ferner
|