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Politics : Impeach George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ThirdEye who wrote (963)12/28/2000 4:23:02 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
IN AMERICA Keep Them Out!
From: The New York Times , December 7, 2000
By BOB HERBERT

The tactics have changed, but the goal
remains depressingly the same: Keep the
coloreds, the blacks, the African-Americans
— whatever they're called in the particular
instance — keep them out of the voting
booths.

Do not let them vote! If you can find a way to
stop them, stop them.

So here we go again, this time in Florida.

It turns out that the state of Florida is using a private company with close
ties to the Republican Party to help "cleanse" the state's voter registration
rolls. Would it surprise anyone anywhere to learn that the cleansing
process somehow managed to improperly prevent large numbers of
African-American voters from voting in the presidential election?


Gregory Palast, a reporter with the online magazine Salon, has done a
number of articles on this. He noted that the company, ChoicePoint, and
its subsidiary, Database Technologies Inc. (DBT), came up with a "scrub
list" of 173,000 names. These were the names of people registered to
vote in Florida who, according to ChoicePoint, could be knocked off the
rolls for one reason or another.

There was good reason for Florida to be concerned about the integrity of
its voter registration rolls. In 1997 the mayor of Miami was removed
from office because widespread fraud had occurred in the election. The
following year a law was passed requiring counties in Florida to purge the
rolls of duplicate registrations, the names of deceased persons and felons.

So far, so good. The problems developed when the state turned to
ChoicePoint, which compiles and sells vast amounts of frequently shaky
information about individuals. (ChoicePoint, which acquired DBT last
May, was fired by the state of Pennsylvania for breaching the
confidentiality of driving records.) With this private outfit in the picture it
soon became clear that top Republican officials would be trying to reap a
partisan political advantage from a law designed to correct an egregious
wrong. And that partisan advantage would be realized in large part by
trampling on the voting rights of minorities.

Over the spring and summer ChoicePoint was forced to acknowledge
that 8,000 voters it had listed as felons had in fact been guilty only of
misdemeanors, which would not have affected their right to vote. What is
maddening is that when such an erroneous list of names gets into the
hands of county election officials, as this one did, it is very difficult —
often impossible — to find out what's correct and what's not correct.

That snickering you hear is from Republican operatives who know that
these kinds of foul-ups, because they are based on criminal records, will
disproportionately affect minority voters.

ChoicePoint eventually came up with a "corrected" list of 173,000 names
of people it targeted as ineligible because they were deceased, or were
registered more than once, or had been convicted of a felony.

But it was a lousy list, riddled with mistakes. And in an interview with me
yesterday, Marty Fagan, a ChoicePoint vice president, said there had
never been any expectation that the list would be particularly accurate.
Remember now, we're talking about a list that would be used to strip
Americans of the precious right to vote.

Mr. Fagan said the list focused on people who "might" have been
deceased, or might have been listed twice, or "possible felons." He said it
was "important to know" that the information needed to be "verified" by
county election officials.

That was interesting, because ChoicePoint came up with 58,000 people
— people registered to vote — who would fall into the category he calls
"possible felons." How in the world were county election officials
supposed to check out each and every one and find out if they were
felons or not?

They couldn't. They didn't.

The horror stories about perfectly innocent black voters being turned
away from the polls because they had been targeted as convicted felons
started coming in early on the morning of Nov. 7, Election Day. And
they're still coming in.

Blacks turned out to vote in record numbers in Florida this year, but huge
numbers were systematically turned away for one specious reason after
another.

The tactics have changed, but the goal remains the same.

nytimes.com



To: ThirdEye who wrote (963)12/28/2000 4:29:14 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 

a Texas company whose CEO made a $100k contribution
to the Republican NationalCommittee.


It's a public company. I wonder if the Bushes own shares!!