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The filthy underside of American democracy: how
Ohio officials have conspired against the SEP and its supporters
By Patrick Martin
15 September 2004
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The effort by Ohio officials to deny ballot status to the Socialist
Equality Party presidential and vice-presidential candidates is
an object lesson in the realities of what passes for democracy
in America. Republican state officials and Democratic and Republican
local officials have joined forces, using undemocratic rules,
arbitrary technicalities and outright fraud, in a concerted attempt
to prevent the socialist campaign from appearing on the November
2 ballot.
The Ohio Secretary of States office determined on Wednesday,
September 8, based on the results of signature checking by county
registrars, that there were only 3,811 valid signatures on the
petitions filed on behalf of the SEP presidential ticket, Bill
Van Auken and Jim Lawrence, well short of the 5,000 required by
state law. The registrars had disqualified more than half the
7,983 signatures filed by the SEP campaign last month, claiming
they were not those of registered voters.
The claim that less than half of those signing the SEP petition
were registered to vote is absurd on the face of it. According
to a report last year by Policy Matters Ohio, a Cleveland-based
think tank, http://www.policymattersohio.org/pdf/EDR_report.pdf,
the proportion of Ohios voting-age residents who were registered
to vote in the 2000 election was 89 percent. That figure has probably
increased for the 2004 election, as both Democrats and Republicans
have mounted well-financed registration drives that have signed
up tens of thousands of new potential voters.
In other words, if one picked 8,000 Ohio residents at random,
more than 7,000 of them would likely be registered to vote. Yet
Ohio state and local officials claim that of the 8,000 people
who signed the SEP petitionpeople not chosen randomly, but
for their interest in working-class politics, and specifically
asked if they were registered to voteless than 4,000 were
registered. This claim fails any test of common-sense plausibility.
From a statistical point of view, it has a probability approaching
zero.
The result of the petition-checking amounts to an indictment,
not of the signature collecting by the SEP, but of the abysmally
corrupt signature checking by local authorities, an expression
of blatant political bias against a socialist and antiwar campaign
which challenges the two established capitalist parties. The result
is that thousands of Ohio voters who signed petitions to put an
alternative to the Democrats and Republicans on the statewide
ballot have been disenfranchised.
The Secretary of States office did not inform the SEP
of its decision that the partys candidate had not qualified
for ballot status. The SEP learned this only the following day,
when our representative telephoned to inquire about the status
of the petition. We were then told that we had six dayscounting
the weekendto obtain copies of the checked petitions and
voter registration records from more than 60 counties, to review
the nearly 4,200 disqualified signatures and seek to have them
re-validated. This enormous clerical job was to be accomplished
by 5pm Wednesday, September 15.
SEP supporters have begun checking the signatures, and can
already report that more than 1,000 of the supposedly invalid
signatures do in fact represent registered voters in the state
of Ohio. By the Wednesday 5pm deadline, there is no doubt that
the SEP will have identified more than enough signatures to bring
the total above the 5,000 requirement.
There is no reason to believe, however, that the Ohio state
government will take notice of this fact. There are no formal
procedures established by the Board of Elections or Secretary
of State Kenneth Blackwell allowing the sponsors of a petition
to rebut a challenge. A representative of Blackwells
office said that as a favor to the SEP, the Secretary
of State would have a panel review any of the disqualified signatures
the SEP sought to restore. But there is no assurance that the
evidence already gathered by the SEP, demonstrating systematic
arbitrary disqualification of valid signatures, will be presented
to any administrative or judicial hearing, let alone seriously
considered.
The task of reviewing the challenged signatures has been made
even more difficult by a series of obstacles for which state and
local election officials are responsible.
The Secretary of States office supplied Xerox copies
of hundreds of petition sheets on which county registrars had
marked the supposed reason for disqualification of each signature:
NR for not registered, NRA for not registered at that address,
NG for not genuine, ILL for illegible, and so on. On dozens of
the sheets, however, the Xerox was cut off so that it was impossible
for SEP supporters to read these notations and review their accuracy.
The lists maintained by the county registrars are riddled with
errors, including incorrect data, misspellings, numbers in fields
which require names, etc. These errors make it more likely that
the signature of a registered voter will be ruled invalid.
The lists maintained by the county registrars are out of date.
Some counties used registration lists that had not been updated
since March. The most current were closed in early July, shortly
after the SEP petition drive began. Tens of thousands of voters
who registered after those dates would be considered unregistered
for the purposes of the petition check.
County petition checkers clearly did not follow one of the
instructions from the Secretary of State, which specifies that
a signature is to be marked illegible only if neither the name
nor the address can be deciphered. Instead, signatures were marked
illegible even though the address was quite readable and could
be used to identify the voter and verify their registrationas
SEP supporters subsequently did.
Officials of Trumbull County, which includes the impoverished
industrial city of Warren, refused to FedEx the countys
registration list or make it available online, instead demanding
that an SEP representative drive to Warren with a check and pick
up the disk. This county had the worst record of signature checking,
claiming that fewer than 40 percent of all those signing the SEP
petition were registered to vote.
Overall, the methods employed by county officials in checking
signatures might be better described as a petition-trashing process.
Its hallmark is petty and arbitrary use of technicalities to frustrate
the clearly expressed will of 8,000 Ohio residents. A case in
point is the first large urban county where SEP supporters have
recanvassed all the challenged signatures, Cuyahoga (Cleveland).
The SEP collected 1,142 signatures in Cuyahoga County, where
the voter registration rate is estimated at 82 percentmeaning
that one could reasonably expect well over 900 signatures to be
those of registered voters. Instead, county officials marked only
598 as valid and 544 as invalid. SEP supporters reviewed all 544
signatures and were able to demonstrate that at least 225 of them
are valid, bringing the percentage valid up to 72 percent, still
below the overall rate of registration.
Of these 225 false disqualifications, 58 signatures were marked
as not genuine because the voters name was block-printed
instead of signed; 112 were gross errors, signatures marked as
not registered even though the countys own records
show the individuals are registered at the address they used in
signing the petition; 55 more were marked as not registered
at address, although the person is clearly registered at
another address in the same community, sometimes having moved
only a block or two away.
No petty detail was too small to serve as a pretext for disqualification.
A few examples suffice:
* Diane C. Jones signed with a very legible signature, giving
her address as 308 Eddy Rd., Cleveland. She was marked not
registered at address because her address is actually 380
Eddy Rd.
* Willie Griffin, of Cleveland, wrote his address as 14247
Trisett instead of 14247 Triskett (he left out a K). He was marked
as not registered.
* An Asian-American voter in the suburb of N. Olmsted, signed
the petition as Xiong Fuqin, but was marked as not registered
because his name according to the voting rolls is Fuqin Xiong.
* Chris Hansen, a voter in suburban South Euclid, was marked
as not registered because she used the diminutive form of her
first name in signing the petition, rather than writing out Christine
in full.
* Bertha Warren of Cleveland signed the petition using the
initial B instead of her first name, and abbreviating the name
of the street she lives on, Hathaway, in the address. Her signature
was determined to be not genuine.
Beyond such pretexts as block-printing, use of initials, obvious
misspellings, transposed digits and abbreviations, there remain
dozens of signatures in Cuyahoga County (and many hundreds statewide)
invalidated for no reason at all, not even the most patently trumped
up. The number of such disqualifications of perfectly executed
signatures has no innocent explanation. It is the result of a
political decision to do everything possible to eliminate the
threat of a political alternative to the Democratic and Republican
parties.
A recent incident in Dayton clearly demonstrated the political
bias of local officials, particularly in the Democratic-controlled
urban counties. On September 2 an official from the Montgomery
County election office called David Lawrence, the son of the SEP
vice-presidential candidate and a petition circulator, asking
him about his registration status. Lawrence asked this person
to email any communication to him so that he would have a written
record. Instead, this official simply disqualified an entire petition
sheet containing 22 names collected by Lawrence, adding a note:
Invalid. Potential Fraud. Called 1:50 9/2/04. Left Message.
Another Montgomery County signature-checker devised a truly
Kafkaesque means of disqualifying a petition sheet. The petitions
circulator signed, as required by law, indicating the number of
signatures on the petition, which was 17. The petition-checker
wrote on the sheet, Invalid. Circulator Count wrong,
apparently taking note of dates filled out in lines 18 and 19
of the petition, which were otherwise blank. In other words, the
entire petition, containing 17 signatures, was disqualified because
the circulator did not claim the blank lines as valid signatures!
The use of such methods is the sign of a political system corrupted
and rotten beyond repair. Procedures such as voter registration
and petitioning for ballot status are devised and enforced, not
to promote the widest possible public participation in political
decision-making, but to ensure that American political life remains
confined within the framework of two right-wing big business parties,
equally devoted to the interests of Corporate America and equally
opposed to the interests of working people.
Transparently arbitrary and cynical attacks on democratic rights,
such as that taking place now in Ohio, are further discrediting
the political system and fueling popular outrage. This is reflected
in the e-mails and letters of protest already coming in to the
office of the Ohio Secretary of State.
The SEP calls on all readers of the WSWS and all supporters
of democratic rights to demand that the Ohio Board of Elections
halt its attack and place Bill Van Auken and Jim Lawrence on the
statewide ballot. Send e-mail messages of protest to:
Kenneth Blackwell
Ohio Secretary of State
election@sos.state.oh.us
Please send copies to editor@wsws.org
See Also:
State of Ohio seeks to deny ballot status
for SEP presidential ticket
[13 September 2004]
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