Dealing . . .
I'm having a tough time dealing with the election. I vote in a small township outside Gambier, Ohio, the town that made the national news because voters had to wait up to 10 hours to get inside a booth on election day. Meanwhile, I spent time 100 feet outside a polling place in the county seat, posted to pass out literature to voters but saw saw hardly hide nor hair of one.
Get this: I was posted outside the YMCA, there was another polling site across the street and a third one at the public library, catty-corner from the Y's parking lot!
I don't know if the election was stolen or not, but I do know Bush ended up with almost 4000 votes more than were cast for him in a precinct in Gahanna, outside Columbus. I do know that the Gambier polling place had two machines (one of which broke down early on to be be fixed later) for a town of about 600 residents and about 1,500 students while the surrounding township, with 200 registered voters, had two fully working machines all day. I know machines were in shorter supply in minority precincts than white suburban ones; that our secretary of state dragged his feet about those Diebold machines all year, tried to disenfranchize new voters who registered on form of the "wrong" paper weight, who fought to make sure Republican voter-intimidators had access to the polls. I know the woman president of the Campus Republicans at the University of Toledo signed challenges on heresay against registered voters she didn't know anything about. I know that Ohio is the land of Diebold and O'Dell . . .
I also know there are a lot of crazy religious types around here. When I was buying the house where I live now the sister of the woman who sold it told me all about the rapture, how she and her fellow believers gathered in one another's homes because the Bible called them out of the regular church. I know that when my daughter moved to a new school the kids called her gay and queer and threatened to beat her up. I know that when we complained to the school counselor he told us the girls who threatened her were "good kids" and wouldn't do such a thing without a reason.
I know that even people who call themselves progressive Christians, or progressive intellectuals or just plain progressives can be cowardly and self-serving to such a degree that they become accomplices to injustice and join the burgeoning ranks of a people in denial.
I know my own struggle to consciously face the truths of my own nature requires me to turn the other cheek, throw no stones. Today and every day since Tuesday, I've felt like hurling bricks through windows. I guess you could say I'm not dealing well . . .
UPDATE: I just received the following email from the 911 Visibility Project:
Outrage in Ohio: Angry Residents Storm State House!
Massive Voter Suppression
and Corruption - Democracy Failure
By David Solnit
November 3,
Toledo Ohio -- Hundreds of angry Ohio residents marched
through the streets
of Columbus, Ohio's Capital, this evening and stormed
the Ohio State House,
defying orders and arrest threats from Ohio State
Troopers. "O-H-I-O,
Suppressed democracy has got to go," they chanted.
After troopers pushed and
scuffled with people, nearly a hundred people
took over the steps and
entrance to the State's giant white column capital
building and refused
repeated orders to disperse or face arrest. People
prepared for arrests,
ready to face jail, writing lawyers phone numbers on
their arms, signing jail
support lists and discussing non-cooperation and
active resistance (linking
arms, but not fighting back).
A freshly painted banner held on the steps
read, "ONE VOTE DENIED =
DEMOCRACY IN TROUBLE! 100'S OF 1000'S OF VOTES
SURPRESSED = DEMOCRACY
FAILED. An unprecedented massive grassroots voter
registration and get out
the vote effort and widespread opposition to Bush
went up against the
massive coordinated Republican effort to suppress,
intimidate and possibly
steal millions of votes. In addition to the voter
suppression and
intimidation is the fact that Bush campaign co-chair
Secretary of State
Kenneth Blackwell is in charge of the election and vote
counting. But much
deeper questions about fundamental flaws in the system
hang in the air.
STOLEN ELECTION?
CNN's exit poll showed Kerry
beating Bush among Ohio women by 53 percent
to 47 percent. Kerry also
defeated Bush among Ohio's male voters 51
percent to 49 percent.
Investigative reporter Greg Palast in an article
today details how the
deciding states, Ohio and New Mexico, if all votes
were actually counted,
should have gone to Kerry. Palast explains,
"Although the exit polls show
that most voters in Ohio punched cards for
Kerry-Edwards, thousands of these
votes were simply not recorded. The
election in Ohio was not decided by the
voters but by something called
"spoilage." Typically in the United States,
about 3 percent of the vote is
voided, just thrown away, not
recorded."
(http://www.tompaine.com/articles/kerry_won_.php)
TESTIMONIES
OF DISENFRANCHISEMENT
The Ohio State House takeover was the culmination
of an eight-hour long
afternoon of protest at the state capital by Ohio
student and youth
groups, including the Columbus and Toledo Leagues of Pissed
Off Voters,
Reach Out--Bowling Green, and the Central Ohio Peace Network. The
earlier
speak-out featured a litany of people who experienced or witnessed
voter
suppression, intimidation and disenfranchisement before and during
the
election. Thousand of Ohio voters had been disenfranchised by
partisan
poll challengers, intimidation incidents, voters polling places
opening
late, lines up to four and five hours long--often in the
rain.
Here are a few of their stories:
Holly Roach of Toledo, Ohio
spoke of her 74-year-old father, Frank Roach
and her 89-year-old grandmother;
Hazel Thompson requested absentee1s
ballots in early October. Hazel Thompson
is homebound and Frank Roach has
been scheduled for heart surgery on November
2. Absentee ballots never
arrived. They were told by the County Voting
Commission that they could
not vote with either regular or provisional
ballots, because they had
already requested absentee ballots and Secretary of
State Kenneth
Blackwell has issued a directive forbidding provisional ballots
by people
who have applied for absentee ballots for them and not received
them
(including some US service people who returned from Iraq). A lawsuit
late
in the afternoon of November 2 by a voter in Lucas County led to a
late
afternoon order by Judge David Katz of the Northern District of
Ohio
instructing the Ohio Secretary of State to immediately advise all
county
boards of election to advise polling precincts in their counties to
issue
provisional ballots to voters in this situation.
Evan Morrison,
a young get out the vote volunteer, told of polls opening
late. One poll at
Glenwood Elementary in Toledo, OH opened more than half
and hour late..
During that time, from 6:30 to after 7AM, more than 50
people left without
having voted. An hour and a half after the polling
site opened, the
Republican election official said they had run out of
pencils, bringing
voting to a halt. Evan ran to the store and bought a
bunch of number 2
pencils out of his own pocket so voting could resume.
Voting continued until
11AM, by which time up to 100 more people had
walked away.
Suzie
Husami, a University of Toledo student said in a press conference
that her
voter registration challenged by Republicans along with 35,000
other mostly
newer registrants. She received a letter from the Board of
Elections reading
NOTICE OF HEARING Pursuant to Ohio Revised Code Section
3503.24: your
registration is being challenged. The reason stated as the
basis for this
challenge is that you are unqualified to vote because you
are not a resident
of the precinct where you can vote. A hearing has been
set at the above
stated place and time. You have the right to appear,
testify and call
witnesses and to be represented by an attorney. The
letter was addressed from
Paula Hicks-Hudson, Director of the Toledo Board
of Elections. Although the
challenges to her were thrown out in court the
day before her hearing
received such letters were likely discouraged from voting.
Alli Starr, also being a get out the vote
volunteer told about how 25
minutes before polls closed in Toledo, Ohio,
Republican challengers were
witnessed harassing voters at the Mott Library,
Central City polling
station, a low-income African-American community.
Observers said that they
believed these challengers had repeatedly called the
police producing
absurd stories in order to intimidate voters. One of the
Republican
challengers was recognized as Dennis Lange, a prominent local
business
owner who owns Pumpernickels.[???] Mr. Lange aggressively tried to
push
back African-American community members who were poll watching and
voting
at the site. At one point more than four police and sheriffs
officers,
including undercover officers, were witnessed at the site for no
apparent
reason. For a photo go to
http://michiganimc.org/newswire/display/7580/index.php
PRE-ELECTION VOTER SUPPRESSION
But even before election day, the Baltimore Chronicle
reported November 1
that "Through a combination of sophisticated vote
rustling, ethnic
cleansing of voter rolls, absentee ballots gone AWOL,
machines that
'spoil' votes---John Kerry begins with a nationwide deficit
that could
easily exceed one million votes."
Troy, Michigan Republican
State Rep. John Pappageorge, a Michigan Bush
campaign Co-Chair, was quoted in
July 16 edition of the Detroit Free Press
as saying, "If we do not suppress
the Detroit vote, we're going to have a
tough time in this election." Blacks
comprise 83 percent of Detroit's
population, and the city routinely elects
Democratic candidates by
substantial margins. The British Broadcasting
Company has also disclosed a
memo to top Republican officials in Florida
identifying voters in
predominantly black precincts for possible
challenge.
The secretaries of state, usually the chief election official
at the state
level, in four battleground states--Michigan, Missouri, Florida,
and Ohio
have all taken top campaign posts for Bush and have been accused
of
manipulating state election laws to restrict voter access on behalf
of
Republicans. Ultra-right Ohio Secretary of State, J. Kenneth
Blackwell,
the co-chair of the Ohio Bush campaign, together with the Ohio
Republican
Party are at the center of this nationwide effort to steal the
election
through voter suppression, intimidation and corruption. In the
months
leading up to the election, Blackwell attempted to require
that
registration applications that were not posted on the correct weight
paper
be cancelled. His efforts to suppress the vote have continued.
Blackwell
sought to restrict access to provisional ballots: he challenged of
the
validity of over 35,000 new voter registrations in the state
(recently
thrown out by a Federal Judge): he issued unclear directives
regarding the
right of ex-felons to vote.
"In state after state,
Republican officials and operatives are working to
deny American citizens the
right to vote," charges Wade Henderson,
executive director of Leadership
Conference on Civil Rights (the country1s
largest civil and human-rights
coalition). Miles Rapoport, former
Secretary of the State of Connecticut and
President of the nonpartisan
public policy organization Demos, says "As the
election approaches,
chilling reports continue to surface of major efforts to
prevent people
from voting. Legions of partisan challengers' are being
readied for the
polls on Election Day; Latino registrants in rural Georgia
are being
targeted; and tens of thousands of new Ohio registrants have
been
challenged. All appear to be organized campaigns. These
anti-democratic
activities must be stopped."
TOUCH-SCREEN VOTING
Additionally, the new touch voting machines being used in 29
states and
the District of Columbia, have been widely criticized by
elections
officials and computer scientists and as susceptible to hacking
and
malfunction. Election Data Services, a consulting firm, predicted
29
percent of voters would use touch-screen machines on voting
day.
According to the November 3 Globe and Mail, "several dozen voters in
six
states -- particularly Democrats in Florida -- said the wrong
candidates
appeared on their touch-screen machine's checkout screen, the
coalition
said. In many cases, voters said they intended to select John Kerry
but
when the computer asked them to verify the choice it showed them
instead
opting for President Bush, the group said. Roberta Harvey, 57,
of
Clearwater, Fla., said she had tried at least a half dozen times to
select
Kerry-Edwards when she voted Tuesday at Northwood Presbyterian
Church.
After 10 minutes trying to change her selection, the Pinellas
County
resident said she called a poll worker and got a wet-wipe napkin to
clean
the touch screen as well as a pencil so she could use its
eraser-end
instead of her finger. Ms. Harvey said it took about 10 attempts
to select
Mr. Kerry before and a summary screen confirmed her intended
selection."
On November 9, 2003, the New York Times reported: "In
mid-August, Walden
W. O'Dell, the chief executive of Diebold Inc., sat down
at his computer
to compose a letter inviting 100 wealthy and politically
inclined friends
to a Republican Party fund-raiser, to be held at his home in
a suburb of
Columbus, Ohio. 'I am committed to helping Ohio deliver its
electoral
votes to the president next year,' wrote Mr. O'Dell, whose company
is
based in Canton, Ohio. That is hardly unusual for Mr. O'Dell. A
longtime
Republican, he is a member of President Bush's 'Rangers and
Pioneers,' an
elite group of loyalists who have raised at least $100,000 each
for the
2004 race. But it is not the only way that Mr. O'Dell is involved in
the
election process. Through Diebold Election Systems, a subsidiary
in
McKinney, Tex., his company is among the country's biggest suppliers
of
paperless, touch-screen voting machines. Judging from Federal
Election
Commission data, at least 8 million people will cast their ballots
using
Diebold machines next November. ... Some people find Mr. O'Dell's
pairing
of interests -- as voting-machine magnate and devoted
Republican
fund-raiser -- troubling."
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/09/business/yourmoney/09vote.htm
*Co-founder
of the Citizens Alliance for Secure Elections, Susan Truitt
said today:
"Seven counties in Ohio have electronic voting machines and
none of them have
paper trails. That alone raises issues of accuracy and
integrity as to how we
can verify the count. A recount without a paper
trail is meaningless; you
just get a regurgitation of the data. Last year,
Blackwell tried to get the
entire state to buy new machines without a
paper trail. The exit polls,
virtually the only check we have against
tampering with a vote without a
paper trail, had shown Kerry with a lead.
... A poll worker told me this
morning that there were no tapes of the
results posted on some machines; on
other machines the posted count was
zero, which obviously shouldn't be the
case."
NATIONWIDE RESPONSE
Across Ohio other demonstrations were
held in Toledo, Cleveland, Oxford,
Athens and Cincinnati. Across the United
States on both elections night
and November 3 people erupted in protest
with marches, direct actions, civil
disobedience, vigils, breaking of bank
windows in San Francisco and rallies
were held in at least 40 cites and
likely many, many more. Many of the
outreach flyers for November 3 actions
were headlined, "NOV 2: VOTE! NOV 3:
MAKE IT COUNT!"
Most of the actions planned by groups were planned to
take place
regardless of the election outcome and were focussed more on the
deeper
issues of democracy not empire, healthcare, not warfare and education
not
occupation.
The day of action was initially called for by the
Beyond Voting network,
whose call for actions read in part, "When your
government has troops
stationed around the world, lets big corporations write
the rules of the
global economy and pushes racist policies that promote fear,
undermines
civil liberties, and rips off working people, you are living in an
EMPIRE!
Empire is as system of global control that combines
international
aggression with domestic repression to create a deeply
undemocratic worldand resources that matter in our lives. Real democracy means
that we make
the decisions that impact our neighborhoods, workplaces, schools
and the
state of the world we hand off to our children. This year the world
is
counting on us to expand the election year debate beyond Democrats
versus
Republicans to the larger issue of whether the U.S. will be a
Democracy or
an Empire."
Two other networks, This Time We Are Watching
(a project of the League of
Pissed Off Voters, the Truthforce Training Center
and the Ruckus Society
with many other groups) and No Stolen Elections
(Global Exhange, Code
Pink, United for Peace and Justice,labor organizers and
others) had also
begun to prepare a people power response for November 3. No
Stolen
Elections publicized a pledge of action to stop a stolen election, but
on
election night they chose not to call on people to take to the
streets.
The Election Protection Coalition an umbrella group of volunteer
poll
monitors that set up a hotline and planned to monitor and make
public
voting irregularities. They may have missed one opportunity to make
a
difference when Ralph G. Neas, president of the People for the
American
Way which helped form the coalition, said to the media,"Overall,
the
problems of outright voter intimidation and suppression have not been
as
great as in the past."
The massive grassroots participation and
activism -- the highest levels of
activism since before the Iraq invasion--
are hopeful. But electoral work
and single-issue campaigns without a broader
systemic analysis are a
recipe for disappointment or failure. Moveon.org has
reportedly not
returned press calls for two days after the election, perhaps
because they
had naively thrown all their hopes with Kerry and lacked a
deeper vision
or longer-term strategy.
The League of Pissed Off Voters
was one of the most hopeful efforts within
the massive grassroots efforts to
unelect Bush. Catalyzing activism around
the election among youth, especialy
youth of color, they had a vision of
building power and organization beyond
the elections using creative
tactics and rooting themselves in hip hop and
youth culture. Other local
grassroots efforts like Ithaca, New York1s Bush
Must Go Coalition, used
the energy of anti-Bush election build their
organization and campaigns
that started before and will continue after the
election
gone. http://indyvoter.org
Let1s be honest.
Kerry would have been an improvement to Bush and sent a
much better signal to
the world, but he is more reactionary than Nixon; a
pro-war, pro-corporate
capitalism millionaire who wants a more
multi-lateral approach to wars and
U.S. empire building. It1s also an
important to remember what makes deeper
changes in the world is movements
and communities and people power, not
politicians. And if we step back and
look at things globally, Bush and his
gang are fringe extremists whose
empire is overextended, and lacks any global
legitimacy. While we are part
of a global majority, an ever growing movement
of movements that is
creating common sense alternatives that will undermine
the empire from
below.
*Quote from the Institute for Public Accuracy
http://accuracy.org
Attached
Photos by Alli Starr
-----
David Solnit volunteered with the
Mobilization for Democracy Not
Disenfranchisement and local anti-bush groups
in NW Ohio in late
October/early November and is the editor of Globalize
Liberation: How to
Uproot the System and Build a Better World
http://www.globalizeliberation.org
y





Comments