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An Election Spoiled Rotten
By Greg Palast
TomPaine.com

  Monday 01 November 2004

  It's not even Election Day yet, and the Kerry-Edwards campaign is
already down by a almost a million votes. That's because, in important
states like Ohio, Florida and New Mexico, voter names have been
systematically removed from the rolls and absentee ballots have been
overlooked-overwhelmingly in minority areas, like Rio Arriba County,
New Mexico, where Hispanic voters have a 500 percent greater chance of
their vote being "spoiled." Investigative journalist Greg Palast
reports on the trashing of the election.

  John Kerry is down by several thousand votes in New Mexico, though
not one ballot has yet been counted. He's also losing big time in
Colorado and Ohio; and he's way down in Florida, though the votes won't
be totaled until Tuesday night.

  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.

  The Urge To Purge

Colorado Secretary of State Donetta Davidson just weeks ago removed
several thousand voters from the state's voter rolls. She tagged felons
as barred from voting. What makes this particularly noteworthy is that,
unlike like Florida and a handful of other Deep South states, Colorado
does not bar ex-cons from voting. Only those actually serving their
sentence lose their rights.

  There's no known, verified case of a Colorado convict voting
illegally from the big house. Because previous purges have wiped away
the rights of innocents, federal law now bars purges within 90 days of
a presidential election to allow a voter to challenge their loss of
civil rights.

  To exempt her action from the federal rule, Secretary Davidson
declared an "emergency." However, the only "emergency" in Colorado
seems to be President Bush's running dead, even with John Kerry in the
polls.

  Why the sudden urge to purge? Davidson's chief of voting law
enforcement is Drew Durham, who previously worked for the attorney
general of Texas. This is what the Lone Star State's current attorney
general says of Mr. Durham: He is, "unfit for public office... a man
with a history of racism and ideological zealotry." Sounds just right
for a purge that affects, in the majority, non-white voters.

  From my own and government investigations of such purge lists, it
is unlikely that this one contains many, if any, illegal voters.

  But it does contain Democrats. The Dems may not like to shout
about this, but studies indicate that 90-some percent of people who
have served time for felonies will, after prison, vote Democratic. One
suspects Colorado's Republican secretary of state knows that.

  Ethnic Cleansing Of The Voter Rolls

We can't leave the topic of ethnically cleansing the voter rolls
without a stop in Ohio, where a Republican secretary of state appears
to be running to replace Katherine Harris.

  In Cuyahoga County (Cleveland), some citizens have been caught
Registering While Black. A statistical analysis of would-be voters in
Southern states by the watchdog group Democracy South indicates that
black voters are three times as likely as white voters to have their
registration requests "returned" (i.e., subject to rejection).

  And to give a boost to this whitening of the voter rolls, for the
first time since the days of Jim Crow, the Republicans are planning
mass challenges of voters on Election Day. The GOP's announced plan to
block 35,000 voters in Ohio ran up against the wrath of federal judges;
so, in Florida, what appear to be similar plans had been kept under
wraps until the discovery of documents called "caging" lists. The
voters on the "caging" lists, disclosed last week by BBC Television
London, are, almost exclusively, residents of African-American
neighborhoods.

  Such racial profiling as part of a plan to block voters is, under
the Voting Rights Act, illegal. Nevertheless, neither the Act nor
federal judges have persuaded the party of Lincoln to join the
Democratic Party in pledging not to distribute blacklists to block
voters on Tuesday.

  Absentee Ballots Go AWOL

It's 10pm: Do you know where your absentee ballot is? Voters wary
about computer balloting are going postal: in some states, mail-in
ballot requests are up 500 percent. The probability that all those
votes-up to 15 million-will be counted is zip.

  Those who mail in ballots are very trusting souls. Here's how your
trust is used. In the August 31 primaries in Florida, Palm Beach
Elections Supervisor Theresa LePore (a.k.a. Madame Butterfly Ballot)
counted 37,839 absentee votes. But days before, her office told me only
29,000 ballots had been received. When this loaves-and-fishes miracle
was disclosed, she was forced to recount, cutting the tally to 31,138.

  Had she worked it the other way, disappearing a few thousand votes
instead of adding additional ones, there would be almost no way to
figure out the fix (or was it a mistake?). Mail-in voter registration
forms are protected by federal law. Local government must acknowledge
receiving your registration and must let you know if there's a problem
(say, with signature or address) that invalidates your registration.
But your mail-in vote is an unprotected crapshoot. How do you know if
your ballot was received? Was it tossed behind a file cabinet-or tossed
out because you did not include your middle initial? In many counties,
you won't know.

  And not every official is happy to have your vote. It is
well-reported that Broward County, Fla., failed to send out nearly
60,000 absentee ballots. What has not been nationally reported is that
Broward's elections supervisor is a Jeb Bush appointee who took the
post only after the governor took the unprecedented step of removing
the prior elected supervisor who happened be a Democrat.

  A Million Votes In The Electoral Trash Can

  "If the vote is stolen here, it will be stolen in Rio Arriba
County," a New Mexico politician told me. That's a reasoned surmise: in
2000, one in 10 votes simply weren't counted-chucked out, erased,
discarded. In the voting biz, the technical term for these vanishing
votes is "spoilage." Citizens cast ballots, but the machines don't
notice. In one Rio Arriba precinct in the last go-'round, not one
single vote was cast for president-or, at least, none showed up on the
machines.

  Not everyone's vote spoils equally. Rio Arriba is 73 percent
Hispanic. I asked nationally recognized vote statistician Dr. Philip
Klinkner of Hamilton College to run a "regression" analysis of the
Hispanic ballot spoilage in the Enchanted State. He calculated that a
brown voter is 500 percent more likely to have their vote spoiled than
a white voter. And It's worse for Native Americans. Vote spoilage is
epidemic near Indian reservations.

  Votes don't spoil because they're left out of the fridge. It comes
down to the machines. Just as poor people get the crap schools and crap
hospitals, they get the crap voting machines.

  It's bad for Hispanics; but for African Americans, it's a
ballot-box holocaust. An embarrassing little fact of American democracy
is that, typically, two million votes are spoiled in national
elections, registering no vote or invalidated. Based on studies by the
U.S. Civil Rights Commission and the Harvard Law School Civil Rights
project, about 54 percent of those ballots are cast by African
Americans. One million black votes vanished-phffft!

  There's a lot of politicians in both parties that like it that
way; suppression of the minority is the way they get elected. Whoever
is to blame, on Tuesday, the Kerry-Edwards ticket will take the hit. In
Rio Arriba, Democrats have an eight-to-one registration edge over
Republicans. Among African American voters...well, you can do the
arithmetic yourself.

  The total number of votes siphoned out of America's voting booths
is so large, you won't find the issue reported in our self-glorifying
news media. The one million missing black, brown and red votes spoiled,
plus the hundreds of thousands flushed from voter registries, is our
nation's dark secret: an apartheid democracy in which wealthy white
votes almost always count, but minorities are often purged or
challenged or simply not recorded. In effect, Kerry is down by a
million votes before one lever is pulled, card punched or touch-screen
touched.

  Greg Palast, contributing editor to Harper's magazine,
investigated the manipulation of the vote for BBC Television's
Newsnight. The documentary, "Bush Family Fortunes," based on his New
York Times bestseller, The Best Democracy Money Can Buy, has been
released this month on DVD (www.gregpalast.com/bff-dvd.htm).
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

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