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On-the-spot report from Tallahassee
Florida A&M students describe Republican attack on voting
rights
By Jerry White
6 December 2000
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this version to print
On November 9, two days after the US election, hundreds of
students from Florida A&M University (FAMU) staged a sit-in
at the state capitol in Tallahassee to protest the disenfranchisement
of tens of thousands of Florida citizens. Many of the protesters
had themselves been turned away from the polls on Election Day,
after officials wrongly claimed they were not registered to vote.
Student leaders at the mostly black university collected more
than 100 complaints from FAMU students, including dozens who were
denied the right to vote or faced intimidating and confusing instructions
from polling officials. Their complaints highlight the hostility
of the Republican-controlled state apparatus toward the voting
rights of working class people, particularly minority workers
and youth.
The issue has evoked strong feelings from FAMU students because
of the long struggle by blacks in Florida and other southern states
to attain voting rights against the violent resistance of Jim
Crow segregationists, who resorted to poll taxes, literacy tests,
property requirements and deadly repression to disenfranchise
African-Americans.
Florida A&M (Agricultural and Mechanical) University, founded
in 1887, is located on the one-time site of the slave plantation
of Florida Governor W.P. Duval. Its students, who at the time
of the university's founding were banned from Tallahassee's all-white
Florida State University, played a prominent role in civil rights
struggles, including the 1956 Tallahassee bus boycott.

In the months prior to the November 7 election, student organizations,
the NAACP and other groups signed up nearly 5,000 first-time voters
on the campus, out of a student body of 12,000. Opposition to
George W. Bush was particularly sharp because of the record of
his brother, Florida Governor Jeb Bush. Earlier in the year thousands
of FAMU students marched in opposition to the Florida governor's
move to dismantle affirmative action programs.
When Jeb was elected it was a wake-up call, said
Anthony Harris, the 20-year-old president pro tem of the student
senate. We knew George W wanted to get rid of affirmative
action without proposing any alternative to help minority students.
His opposition to a woman's right to an abortion and his environmental
record also fueled concern. On Election Day our campus had the
highest minority turnout in Tallahassee, with 85 to 90 percent
of the registered students voting.
Because of our initiative we encountered problems with
the procedures at several polling places. Students were turned
away because they couldn't furnish a registration card or drivers
license, although they would have been permitted to vote if they
had signed an affidavit swearing they had not already voted. But
they were never told that. In addition, many went to vote but
the county had them listed as having to vote elsewhere, and had
given the students no prior notice.
Harris said students also had difficulty getting their registration
cards sent back from the Secretary of State's office, even though
they had mailed their requests well in advance, in some cases
months before the deadline. One student, he said, had registered
on campus four times and never received a voter's card.
The student government began the registration drive in
July and August, and completed it by the cut-off day just prior
to the election, Harris said. We took hundreds of
registrations to the county court house, but many students never
received their cards in the mail. When students got to the polling
places they were told their names weren't on the list. Others,
who had no way of knowing where to vote because they had no card,
arrived at the polling station, only to be told to go somewhere
else.
Hillery Kelly, a 21-year-old
junior, described what happened when students made an error and
requested another ballot. People realized that they had
just made a mistake and punched the wrong hole. When they went
up for another ballot they were refused. Instead the polling officials
told them to punch the same ballot again. By law a person can
get up to three ballots, but they were refused.
Ms. Kelly, continued, At the courthouse they told us
to register the students again. Many people who had signed up
a month or two in advance never got their cards. One student got
two cards, each with a different location to vote. We had had
workshops to show people how to correctly register to vote.
Because we are students we also change addresses often.
Some students went to their new precinct and were told they were
registered in their old one. One student who registered here was
told her registration was sent to Clearwater.
Many out-of-state students never received their absentee
ballots. I'm from Georgia, just north of here. Things are so fishy
that my mother would not allow me to mail my absentee ballot to
her. She insisted that I drive it up.
Ms. Kelly explained that the suppression of voting rights was
bound up with maintaining conditions of economic and political
oppression that confront many blacks and working class people
in the Deep South. I live 50 miles away in Georgia, where
poverty and other conditions make people feel they are being kept
down, she said. Segregation continues to exist, in
what we call separation academies'white-only schools
that were set up after integration, using as a front the pretense
that they were Christian schools or run by some academy. These
schools pick the students they want and money is being channeled
from public schools into these schools.
Police blockades and intimidation of voters
The student leaders also said many black workers in Tallahassee
had been turned away from the polls on the grounds that the polls
were closed. Polling officials closed the locations while voters
were still waiting in line, although the law says people must
be allowed to vote if they are in line before closing time. The
student leaders said one black worker complained of police intimidation
near her polling location.
Contacted by the World Socialist Web Site, Roberta Tucker,
a deputy clerk for the state of Florida, said, The police
had set up a road block, a Highway Patrol check point, about a
mile from my voting precinct. The police asked me for my driver's
license, looked at it and told me to go ahead. I found this suspicious.
I've lived in the area for 10 years and there has never been a
roadblock. They didn't check my registration or any other documents.
I thought to myself, you're stopping black people on
their way to voteto intimidate first-time voters. Nothing
was going on to warrant a roadblock. But this is a minority area
and it's Election Day. I went ahead to vote and then I telephoned
the NAACP and informed them of this. I asked them to investigate
because it was suspicious to me.
The Florida Highway Patrol chief later told the newspaper
that the roadblock was not authorized and that he knew nothing
about it. This was only a matter of four or five white highway
patrol officers acting on their own? How could they not know about
thisjust a mile from the voting booths?
My experience may have been light compared to some other
cases of police intimidation around the state. At the time, I
didn't know what other people were going through, I was only suspicious.
Elan Thompson, a representative
of the student government who collected dozens of complaints about
voting irregularities, said, We had a huge effort to get
people out to vote. Now they're being told that their votes don't
count. The US preaches about democracy to everybody, but we have
to stand by those ideals.
I'm from Kansas City, Missouri, where 900 votes in the
metropolitan area were thrown out for irregularities. In Jacksonville,
Florida, a city with a comparable population, 22,000 votes were
thrown out. This goes beyond the factions fighting it out, it's
about the right of people to vote.
These concerns prompted Florida A&M students to organize
their protest on November 9. Anthony Harris explained, Reports
the day after the election confirmed that voters were being disenfranchised
around the state, not just on our campus. We held a town hall
meeting and decided to hold a march.
Almost 2,000 students, including white students from
Florida State University, joined the march to the capitol and
we filed into the rotunda. As we marched, people were clapping
in the streets. We demanded to see Secretary of State Harris and
we were prepared with pillows and blankets to stay all night.
Ms. Harris spoke to me and some of the other student
leaders. We asked her to address the students' concerns about
voting irregularities and asked her what she intended to do if
the canvassing boards tried to certify what were clearly incomplete
vote tallies. She said that she was going to certify the votes.
She blamed the voters for being confused in places like West Palm
Beach, and said their votes would be thrown out. She refused to
address the students in the rotunda and after five or seven minutes,
her assistant said we had to leave because Harris was preparing
for a press conference.
Another leader of the
protest, Student Senate President Andrew Gillum, said, I'd
like to see the attorneys for Gore raise the issue of the disenfranchising
of blacks, but they haven't. These broken voting machines, some
of which haven't been cleaned for 10 years, were predominantly
in economically deprived and minority voting precincts.
This was not an accident. It was a grand design to strip
voting rights. There is a great history of the struggle of our
people, our grandparents, to fight for the right to vote. This
is similar to what people faced in Mississippi and Alabama that
is more readily identified with the Deep South. Who would have
thought we would be dealing with disenfranchisement in the twenty-first
century? This reminds me of the issues surrounding the Civil War,
like states' rights and the role of the federal government.
The Voting Rights Act is being abridged, but the Democrats
have not made this a central issue. They don't think it's popular,
even though the turnout of blacks delivered what in reality was
a winning margin for Gore. The Democrats may not think discrimination
is a mainstream issue, but if you can take away the rights of
blacks to vote, you can take away anybody's right.
See Also:
Court rulings in US election crisis attack
democratic rights
[5 December 2000]
Precinct voting studies suggest sizable
Gore victory margin in Florida
[4 December 2000]
African-Americans, Haitians in Miami-Dade
demand recount
[4 December 2000]
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