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Black
Votes, the Senate, and Voter Suppression
Vote NO on Hans von Spakovsky's Confirmation
By The
Color Of
Change
Team
Please tell your senators to vote
NO on Hans von Spakovsky's confirmation
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For far too long,
the Republican Party has suppressed the
votes of Black folks and other minorities,
while the Democratic party has stood by and
done nothing. Now, President Bush and his
allies in the Senate want to give Hans von
Spakovsky -- the architect of some of the
worst voter-suppression schemes in the last
decade -- a six-year appointment to the
Federal Election Commission (FEC). It's
a slap in the face to Black voters and
anyone who cares about democracy.
Can you tell
your senators to reject von Spakovsky's
nomination? It takes only a moment:
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http://www.colorofchange.org/vonspak/?id=2017-171620
Republicans
have been fighting for months to get von Spakovsky
confirmed, and, last week, Democrats in the Senate
caved. They made a deal with the Republicans that would
allow von Spakovsky's confirmation to be voted on as a
part of a "package" with three other nominees,
essentially guaranting his appointment. Thankfully,
Senators Barack Obama and Russ Feingold stepped up and
blocked it.1,2 Now they need our support to
convince their colleagues to do the right thing and take
a stand against voter suppression.
Given von Spakovsky's
history, it's sad they need any convincing at all.
A long history of
undermining our vote
During his
first term, Bush installed von Spakovsky in the Justice
Department's (DOJ) voting rights section, which enforces
the Voting Rights Act. There, von Spakovsky undermined
the DOJ's historic mission of protecting minority voting
rights and actually transformed the department into a
tool to suppress the vote. Here are just a few examples:
When
long-term, career attorneys at the Justice Department
unanimously recommended rejecting Tom Delay's infamous
Texas redistricting plan because it discriminated
against minority voters, von Spakovsky led the charge to
overrule these voting rights experts, and approved the
plan.3 The Supreme Court later ruled that the
plan violated the Voting Rights Act.
Similarly,
when career attorneys recommended rejecting a
discriminatory Georgia voter ID law -- a law that even
the Republican Governor said would disenfranchise
hundreds of thousands of Georgians -- von Spakovsky
overruled them to approve the law.4 Again,
the law was later struck down by the courts, with the
ruling judge likening it to a Jim Crow-era poll tax.5
This
summer, seven of von Spakovsky's former colleagues at
the DOJ said that he blocked career attorneys from
filing at least three lawsuits against local governments
that had violated the voting rights of Black people and
other minorities, and that he derailed at least two DOJ
investigations into discriminatory election laws.6
Von
Spakovsky's career in suppression didn't start at the
DOJ. In 1997, he set the stage for Florida's 2000 voter
purge when he wrote an article that called for purging
felons from voter rolls. Serving on the board of the
"Voter Integrity Project" (VIP) he quickly put his ideas
into action -- VIP met with the company that designed
Florida's purge to disenfranchise thousands of eligible
voters, most of whom were Black.7,8 During
the recount, von Spakovsky was in Florida as a volunteer
for the Bush/Cheney campaign.
A key part of what has allowed
von Spakovsky to push his suppression agenda is the myth
that "voter fraud" -- individuals voting illegally, or
voting twice -- is a real problem. Republican
politicians invoke these concerns to justify stronger
restrictions on voting and voter registration (like
voter ID laws), as well as voter roll purges. But the
problem simply doesn't exist. When the Election
Assistance Commission (EAC) researched voter fraud, they
found that it wasn't a problem.9 But before
the EAC went public with its report, von Spakovsky
pressured them to change it.10 The final
report said that there was "a great deal of debate on
the pervasiveness of [voter] fraud."11
Does the Senate support voter
suppression?
As shocking as these examples
are, they only scratch the surface. Hans von Spakovsky
has built a career solidifying Republican control by
disenfranchising untold thousands and subverting our
most fundamental democratic right.
Bush gave von Spakovsky a
recess appointment to the FEC in 2005 (which doesn't
require Senate confirmation). Now he has nominated him
for a six-year term. It's been clear since von
Spakovsky's arrival at the FEC that he is playing the
same role he did at the DOJ—scoffing at the spirit of
campaign finance laws, thumbing his nose at the law as
he seeks to help create routes of circumvention."12
Republicans want von Spakovsky
on the FEC so much that they threatened to block all
FEC nominees unless the Democrats let von Spakovsky
through.13 But last week, instead of fighting
back, the Democratic leadership agreed to give the
Republicans what they wanted—a vote on all four FEC
nominees as a package, which would have guaranteed von
Spakovsky's appointment. By blocking that vote, Senators
Obama and Feingold went against the leadership and
thwarted its compromise with Republicans.14
That gave us the fighting chance we need to defeat his
nomination.
It's hard to know exactly why
Senate Democrats have come so close to letting von
Spakovsky through. Some say it's because Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid is afraid that if he blocks von
Spakovsky, Republicans will retaliate by blocking
another FEC nominee who's a friend of Reid's.15
Some senators may just not care enough about protecting
voting rights to make a real effort. Whatever the
reason, it's part of a pattern that has existed for far
too long -- Republicans trashing our right to vote and
Democrats looking the other way.
A vote for von Spakovsky is a
vote for voter suppression. Anything less than the
strongest condemnation of his nomination sends the
message that the Senate will turn a blind eye to
Republican attacks on our voting rights. Let's demand
that our senators send the opposite message -- that they
will fight tooth and nail to defend the right to vote,
and that their rejection of von Spakovsky's nomination
is only the beginning of a much needed reckoning for his
assault on voting rights over the last six and a half
years.
http://www.colorofchange.org/vonspak/?id=2017-171620
Thank You and Peace,
James, Van, Gabriel, Clarissa,
Mervyn, and the rest of the
Color Of
Change
Team
October 18th, 2007
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References:
1. "Obama,
Others Nix Deal on Voter Fraud Guru,"
TPMMuckraker, October 4, 2007
http://www.tpmmuckraker.com/archives/004381.php
2. "Obama,
Feingold: We Oppose von Spakovsky
Nomination," October 4, 2007
http://www.tpmmuckraker.com/archives/004389.php
3. "So exactly
where were you, Hans von Spakovsky, on the
nights in question?," Campaign Legal Center
Blog, Feb. 20, 2007
http://www.clcblog.org/blog_item-109.html
4. Ibid
5. "Efforts to stop ‘voter fraud' may have
curbed legitimate voting," McClatchy
Newspapers, May 20, 2007
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/staff/greg_gordon/story/16347.html
6. "Justice
official accused of blocking suits into
alleged violations of minorities' voting
rights," McClatchy Newspapers, Jun. 18, 2007
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/reports/usattorneys/story/17102.html
7. "Poll
position: Is the Justice Department poised
to stop voter fraud-or to keep voters from
voting?" New Yorker, September 20, 2004
http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2004/09/20/040920fa_fact
8. Video:
"American Blackout: Cynthia McKinney
Confronts Choicepoint"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VPOmOTyDm1w
9. "The EAC's
Buried Report on 'Voter Fraud'," Brad Blog,
Oct. 13, 2006
http://www.bradblog.com/?p=3611
10. See reference
5
11. "Panel Said
to Alter Finding on Voter Fraud," New York
Times, April 11, 2007
http://www.ceimn.org/news/panel_said_alter_finding_voter_fraud
12. See reference
3
13. "Senate
panel advances controversial FEC appointee,"
The Hill, September 27, 2007
http://tinyurl.com/2stwz4
14. See references
1 and 2.
15.
"Back-Scratching Across the Aisle," New York
Times, October 3, 2007
http://tinyurl.com/2xgs3x
Additional
sources:
"Hans Across
America," Digby's Hullabaloo, April 9, 2007
http://tinyurl.com/368jbt
"Keep Yer Vote Thievin' Hans Off the Federal
Election Commission: Action Alert!" DailyKos,
May 29, 2007
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2007/5/29/11751/0476
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posted 18 October 2007 |