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The US election
Florida citizens denounce Republican efforts to disenfranchise
voters
By Jerry White
30 November 2000
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Dozens of angry citizens testified Wednesday at a public hearing
before the Florida state legislature about Election Day intimidation
on the part of polling officials, as well as confusing ballots
and malfunctioning machines. The common theme was that they, and
thousands of other votersparticularly in neighborhoods with
large populations of minorities, poor people and senior citizenshad
been disenfranchised.
The testimony underscored the scale of intimidation and fraud
employed by the Republican-controlled state apparatus to obtain
a victory for Bush. Workers, retirees, college students and local
poll workers demanded that all votes cast on November 7 be counted,
and accused the Republicans of attempting to suppress the democratic
rights of the people.
Witnesses testified before a joint committee of eight Republicans
and six Democrats, originally set up to investigate voter irregularities,
which convened in the state capital of Tallahassee. Many voters
denounced the Republican majority in the state legislature for
threatening to call a special session to name their own slate
of electors for George W. Bush. Republican lawmakers, who outnumber
Democrats 77 to 43 in the state House and 25 to 15 in the Senate,
may vote Thursday to begin a special session as early as next
Tuesday.
Florida Governor Jeb Bush, the brother of the Republican presidential
candidate, earlier said it would be an act of courage
for the legislators to go into special session and that he would
sign legislation naming a separate slate of electors.
If there is uncertainty, the legislature has clearly
delegated authority from the US Constitution to seek the electors.
I admire them for, at least on a contingency basis, accepting
that responsibility and duty, Bush told reporters Wednesday.
In an interview with CNN, former Republican White House Chief
of Staff Boyden Grey called the state legislators' move an insurance
policy.
During testimony on Wednesday one woman voter said, What
you are doing is totally contradictory to the will of the people.
I believe I speak for the people when I say: Take time to count
the votes, do not steal our votes. Don't take the unconstitutional
act of taking away our votes. A black woman from Riviera
Beach pointedly asked: What right do you have to determine
the will of the people in the absence of a complete count of the
vote? The Republicans on the committee exchanged smirks
during the testimony of this and other voters.
When voters arrived Wednesday morning to testify they discovered
to their surprise that the Republicans had changed the agenda
from one to investigate voter irregularities to one paving the
way for the selection of a slate of pro-Bush electors. On Tuesday,
the name of the panel was changed from Legislative Oversight
Committee on Electoral Certification, Accuracy and Fairness
to Select Joint Committee on the Manner of the Appointment
of Presidential Electors. As one speaker pointed out, a
November 24 letter from the Florida legislature said the hearing
would investigate the alleged failure to count overseas
military ballots and inconsistent standards in countiesboth
partisan Republican issues, she said. When recounts
in Broward County were cutting into Bush's lead, You needed
those issues, she said, now you don't.
The panel then imposed a rule to only allow testimony pertaining
to the constitutional issue of declaring electors. But the workers
defied the Republicans' efforts to discourage and intimidate them
and insisted on testifying. One black woman said, You might
try to cut me off or even drag me out of here, but I'm going say
what I'm going to say.
Elizabeth Campbell, a 19-year-old college student who said
she had driven more than seven hours to attend the hearing, continued
in this defiant tone: You're not going to stop me from speaking.
The young white woman, who identified herself as a registered
Republican, said she lived in a predominantly black neighborhood
in Palm Beach County. I have observed that in most of the
counties the majority of people that have been disenfranchised
have either lived in a Jewish community or an African-American
community. If you are here asking us why we don't want you to
make the choice for president for us, that's because we have been
disenfranchised in minority communities, which are protected by
civil rights laws enacted in 1965.
Ms. Campbell, who said she had spent long hours registering
black voters in the county, told the legislators, By doing
what you are doing, it's like saying: Florida didn't have
the right to vote, but let's make that vote for them.' Voting
is the only voice that we have in our community. I will not stop
here or in Washington until I get heard and the thousands of voters
in our area are heard.
A number of poll workers testified that they had been swamped
by the voter turnout and when they called Tallahassee to check
on the registration of voters who did not appear on local lists,
the telephone lines were busy for three hours or more. Many polls,
particularly in minority and poor areas, did not have computers
to automatically access voter registration lists and in many cases
registered voters were turned away from the polls.
Other Palm Beach residents testified about the confusing butterfly
ballot that led many to mistakenly vote for Reform Party candidate
Patrick Buchanan. They denounced efforts to depict voters in the
area as ignorant or senile, and some suggested that the confusing
ballots were a deliberate effort to take votes away from Gore.
The Palm Beach Post reported November 12 that voters in
black precincts were 130 times more likely to have their votes
discardedeither because the machine did not record a vote
for president or because holes for two presidential candidates
were punchedthan those in white precincts.
Olga Gideon, an elderly black woman, said, The consensus
is that people down here were dumb. I graduated from Tuskegee
Institute and then went on to get further degrees at teachers
college and elsewhere. I don't think I'm illiterate or made a
mistake. There was something wrong with that ballot.
Michael Ryan, a vote count observer in Palm Beach, said if
the 3,400 ballots that were mostly miscast for Buchanan were added
to 5,000 that were rejected because they were punched for both
Buchanan and Gore, there would be more than 8,000 additional votes
for the Democratic candidate.
Hope Ellis said, I'm a children's librarian, 43 years
old, with a university degree. I'm not senile now, haven't played
bingo in 20 years. I've lived in five states and I have never
seen a ballot like that in my life. I was totally confused. And
when I asked the pollster for help and indicated that I wanted
to vote for Al Gore, she immediately turned ugly. I know she saw
me punch Buchanan and she did not say a word. I want my vote to
count.
An elderly black woman from Miami, Eula Fraser, said, I
can't say I'm a constitutional expert. I do not know how to interpret
the Constitution. It has been so long since I studied it. However,
I do know there is a constitutional right that protects me and
other citizens of the state of Florida, and gives us the right
for our voices to be heard. We elected you as our representatives,
and I'm here today to say that I want you to think about what
you are doing. We are asking you do the right thing and make sure
that you don't do what is going to make us angry, because you
are all coming back home.
One middle-aged man, who identified himself as an engineer
and a registered Republican who voted for Gore, said, People
went to the polls to vote. Now many of the votes are not being
counted because politicians are interfering with the process.
The bottom line is there are citizens out there whose votes are
not being counted. I left the polling booth thinking that my vote
would be countedit may not have been. Tens of thousands
from Broward, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade counties might not have
been counted. I demand the right to have my vote counted. I don't
know why you are denying that right.
Looking at the Republicans on the panel, one voter said, In
1933-45 in Germany, no laws were broken, but many atrocities and
injustices occurred. The individual voices of the people and the
collective voices of communities were eliminated. I implore you
to remember all the individuals who wish to have their voices
heard.
Elizabeth Ramsey described herself as a soccer mom
and Cub Scout leader who was testifying on behalf of her small
children. A year ago, she began, I had no idea
about Crossfire and Hardball [two nationally broadcast
cable news programs] or any of that. But I watch this as an angry
citizen and it disturbs me that the legislature is stepping in.
My mom told me the legislature would never intervene. Now here
I stand. I wasn't a political junkie before but this whole election
process has been a huge eye-opener. My eyes are very wide open
now.
Also on Wednesday, the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People (NAACP) filed a series of federal lawsuits charging
that the Voting Rights Law of 1965 had been violated because of
voter irregularities and possible voter fraud. The
NAACP said its lawsuits would show polling sites were moved
without timely notice or no notice; voters were disenfranchised
by some polls closing early; some polling places had no bilingual
ballots and Haitian voters were denied assistance from translators;
there was a disproportionate purging of votes in predominantly
Black precincts in several counties, including Duval and in West
Palm Beach; charges of voter intimidation in Broward and Hillsboro
counties and inadequate training of poll workers.
A statewide campaign by the NAACP and other organizations,
encouraged in part by opposition to Governor Jeb Bush's decision
last year to eliminate affirmative action, signed up nearly 60,000
new black voters between February and October of this year alone.
Exit polls on election day showed blacks' share of the turnout
in Florida jumped to 16 percent, compared to 10 percent in the
last presidential election.
In the hours after the polls closed on November 7, the NAACP
and other civil rights groups charged that blacks were intimidated
by police sweeps and roadblocks in black precincts in Tampa, outside
of Tallahassee and in other minority areas. They also noted that
several ballot boxes in predominantly black precincts had not
been picked up by voting officials and that registration cards
for students at some black colleges did not arrive until the afternoon
of Election Day.
Several days after the election the NAACP held a public hearing
in Miami where 20 witnesses testified about potential civil rights
violations. These included middle-class white voters who testified
that they saw polling officials challenging black voters and demanding
they produce photo identification, although none was demanded
of white voters. The NAACP and other groups sent hundreds of sworn
statements to the Justice Department and called for a federal
investigation.
On Wednesday, NAACP President Kweisi Mfume criticized the Justice
Department for refusing to act on substantive charges of civil
rights violations. Given the Justice Department's silence,
he said, we have filed suits to seek legal remedies that
will determine what happened during this election.
See Also:
The
US election
Gore cites breach of democratic rights in defending his appeal
of Florida vote
[29 November 2000]
Bush
campaign organized Republican riot to halt Miami-Dade recount
[29 November 2000]
As
the election is thrown into the courts
The issue is joined in the US: the right to vote or government
by usurpation
[28 November 2000]
The
US Elections
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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