16.
Caging Lists
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A7422-2004Oct28.html
Republicans
yesterday continued to challenge the validity of tens of thousands of voter
registrations in
After
initially saying he would not contest a Wednesday ruling halting the
challenges, Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell (R) worked with other
election officials who asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit in
Cincinnati to allow GOP challenges to 35,000 voters from mostly urban and
minority areas to proceed before the election. As of late last night, the court
had not ruled.
Also
yesterday, Republicans in
The
Republican challenges in Ohio, Wisconsin and other battleground states prompted
civil rights and labor unions to sue in U.S. District Court in Newark, saying
the GOP is violating a consent decree, issued in the 1980s by Judge Dickinson
R. Debevoise and still in effect, that prevents the Republicans from starting
"ballot security" programs to prevent voter fraud that target
minorities.
Judith
A. Browne, acting co-director of the Advancement Project, which filed the
lawsuit along with the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, said the
Republican "challenges were, and currently are, used to disenfranchise
minority voters."
Republican “Caging Lists” (Greg
Palast)
http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Oct04/Palast1026.htm
A secret document obtained from inside Bush
campaign headquarters in
Two e-mails, prepared for the executive director
of the Bush campaign in
It lists 1,886 names and addresses of voters in
predominantly black and traditionally Democrat areas of
An elections supervisor in
Ion Sancho, a Democrat, noted that
Democracy in Chains (Greg Palast)
http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/greg_palast/2006/06/voting_rights_act_nailed_to_bu.html
Don't
kid yourself: the Republican party's decision
yesterday to "delay"
the renewal of the Voting Rights Act has not a darn thing to do with objections
of the Republican's white sheets caucus.
Complaints
by a couple of good ol' boys to legislation have never stopped the GOP
leadership from rolling over dissenters.
This is a strategic stall that is meant to decriminalise the Republican party's new game of challenging voters of colour by the
hundreds of thousands.
In the 2004 presidential race, the GOP ran a massive, multi-state,
multimillion-dollar operation to challenge the legitimacy of black, Hispanic
and Native American voters. The methods used breached the Voting Rights Act,
and while the Bush administration's civil rights division grinned and looked
the other way, civil rights lawyers began circling, preparing to sue to stop
the violations of the act before the 2008 race.
So Republicans have promised to no longer break the law - not by going legit
but by eliminating the law.