Booman Tribune

The republican War on Voting Rights

by clammyc
Mon May 5th, 2008 at 07:57:26 PM EST

It’s long past time to talk about this whole “election integrity/voter fraud/voter ID/election fraud/ballot fraud” matter in a very different way. Consider the following hurdles that have not been overcome when talking about the need for wholesale election reform:

  • Talking about the hackability of voting machines doesn’t work because you can’t prove that they were, in fact, hacked in a manner that would show not just beyond-a-reasonable doubt but beyond-any-doubt-whatsoever (not fair, but true);
  • Talking about “voter ID”, actually, more like anti-voter laws isn’t working because, well, for starters, the SCOTUS just affirmed this, despite there being no documented case of this type of fraud occurring;
  • Talking about stolen elections hasn’t worked because either “it always happens anyway”, or the same “you can’t prove it” rebuttal;
  • Talking about the US Attorney firings or the redistricting or the stacking of the DOJ with partisan hacks is too complicated to put on a bumper sticker;
  • Talking about the thousands of anecdotes of vote machine flipping went nowhere either; and
  • Talking about exit poll discrepancies has led to the amazing argument that exit polls are not reliable, even though they are used pretty much everywhere else in the entire world as a measure of whether elections were fixed and they have never been as far off as they have so consistently been the past 8 years.

It seems like the whole “War On [insert boogyman here]” theme works well, and the fact is, all of the above - not to mention the few other matters that have come to light over the past few years with respect to election-related issues and questionable vote suppression laws and actions.

And the fact is, the Indiana voter ID anti-voter law is just one of many, many pieces to the bigger picture, all done in the name of “protecting voters” but are really intended to legally give republicans an Election Day headstart of at least 10 million potential votes.

Don’t believe me? OK, fair enough.

According to the National Council of State Legislators, half of the states have voter ID anti-voter laws more strict than the federal requirements:

Twenty-five states have broader voter identification requirements than what HAVA mandates. In these states, all voters are asked to show identification prior to voting. Seven of these states specify that voters must show a photo ID; the other eighteen states accept additional forms of identification that do not necessarily include a photo.
Oh, wait - my mistake. Kansas legislators just agreed on provisions for a voter ID anti-voter law, so make that 26 states by the 2010 elections.

So, now that this is out of the way, I’ll refer to a 2006 DOJ memo that I discussed over the weekend:

the US Department of Justice put out a release regarding the “massive” voter fraud that they have uncovered and investigated. And there was lots to be “proud” of:
As a result of the Initiative, nationwide enforcement of election crimes has increased dramatically. At present, 195 investigations are pending throughout the country. Moreover, since the start of the Initiative in 2002 over 300 investigations of possible election crime have been opened, and over 125 election crime matters have been closed after investigation; 119 individuals have been charged with ballot fraud offenses and 86 individuals have been convicted of these crimes; and 48 individuals have been charged with campaign financing fraud and 42 individuals have been convicted of these offenses.
In over four years, only 42 individuals have been convicted, and under 50 have been charged with campaign finance fraud - now if we think of those who have been heavily lined to campaign finance fraud, one party comes to mind in a big way - and that isn’t the one who keeps pushing “voter fraud” laws. Only 86 people were convicted of “ballot fraud” (of course, Ann Coulter was cleared after calling in a favor from her well connected boyfriend), out of 300 investigations.
The issue of the voter going to the polling place in order to personally cast a vote that is fraudulent is, based on the DOJ’s own numbers - basically nonexistent. And the one high profile case was that of Ann Coulter, someone who conveniently wasn’t charged.

But the issue of voters without proper ID is one that is potential gold for the party that (1) wouldn’t likely get these votes anyway and (2) can eliminate a possible 10 million plus registered voter (or vote) advantage.

Still don’t believe me? OK, fine. Let’s just look at the tens of thousands of Floridians who were disenfranchised in 2000, or the hundreds of thousands of Ohio voters in 2004 who were disenfranchised for a contrast to the 150 or so individuals who the DOJ is touting.

So how am I getting the 10 million plus number that is central to the republican war on voting rights? Well, let’s just forget the 2002 NH phone jamming, or the voter roll purges in Florida that I mention above, or the illegal TX redistricting or the voter roll management lawsuits in New Jersey, Missouri, Maine and Pennsylvania for a minute.

According to The League of Women Voters, close to 11% of Americans (21 million) have no photo identification. They break this down a bit further:

he following statistics reflect those individuals who do not have photo identification:

  • 11% or as many as 21 million Americans
  • 36% of voters in Georgia over the age of 75;
  • 18% of Americans over 65 (6 million);
  • 25% of African Americans;
  • 10% or 40 million people with disabilities;
  • 15% of low income voters
Here are a few more numbers:

  • 650,000 registered voters in Georgia have no photo-ID (law recently passed);
  • 200,000 Missourians of voting age, including 16% of seniors, have no photo-id;
  • 5.5 million African American voting age citizens have no photo-ID;
  • 6 million senior citizens have no photo-id
And just for good measure, here are a few other breakdowns:
People with disabilities:

According to disability advocates, nearly ten percent of the 40 million Americans with disabilities do not have any form of state-issued photo identification. Source: Center for Policy Alternatives

Low income people: Citizens earning less than $35,000 per year are more than twice as likely to lack current government-issued photo identification as those earning more than $35,000. Indeed, the survey indicates that at least 15 percent of voting-age American citizens earning less than $35,000 per year do not have a valid government-issued photo ID. Source: NYU and Brennen Center Survey

Other than the “we know that older Americans, African Americans, low income Americans are more likely to vote Democratic”, let’s look at a few stats on these demographics. All of these were derived from the tables at the University of Berkeley’s “Quick Tables”.

For Americans between the ages of 56-89, there is a roughly 47% - 39% advantage of “Near Dem - Strong Dem” over “Near rep - Strong rep”. If we break down the numbers by race, even independents outnumber “Near rep - Strong rep” by an amount of 18% - 9% for African Americans. And by the way, “Near Dem - Strong Dem” gets a whopping 73%. If we look at “Other race”, then the “Near Dem - Strong Dem”/”Independent”/”Near rep - Strong rep” breakdown is 52%/27%/20%.

And what about the families earning less than $25,000? Their average breakdown is 47% for “Near Dem - Strong Dem”, 23% independent and 26% for “Near rep” - “Strong rep”.

One more “obvious statistic” can be found to show the disparity. 88% of African Americans voted for Kerry, and 90% voted for Gore.

The real basic take away here is that if you are going to tip elections, you aren’t going to be able to do it “one vote at a time” as these voter id, anti-voter laws purport to combat.

You do it by rigging the system from the inside - by massive voter roll purges that are designed to purge the very demographics that are most likely to hurt the other party, by challenging districting in order to “make it more fair for people’s votes to be reflective of the district”, by implementing laws that are meant to keep millions of people who are likely to vote for the other party from voting and by stacking the deck in the positions where the voting machines are selected and monitored, where the federal and state election laws are “interpreted”, where the decisions are made with respect to voter registration and how the elections are run and even having cousins in the very media outlets who are calling the races for their candidate-cousins.

Make no mistake - this is a more than just a major partisan initiative. This is an all out assault on the voting rights of millions of potential Democratic voters and therefore, votes. This is a premeditated, long term, wide ranging attack against millions of Americans’ voting rights. But it isn’t just an assault on Democratic voters. It is an assault on the most basic right that a democracy affords.

And it should be referred to accordingly.



Display:
Thank you for a well researched succinct summary.
by AliceDem on Mon May 5th, 2008 at 08:07:36 PM EST
thx for the compliment.  I didn't know if I was throwing in too much, and was going to make this part of a series.

I still think I will make it a series anyway....

My Three Cents - 50% more opinion for free

by clammyc (clam227atyahoo) on Mon May 5th, 2008 at 08:12:07 PM EST
[ Parent ]
A series would be great. This material bears repetition.
by AliceDem on Mon May 5th, 2008 at 08:41:10 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I'm just sorry to say you say that since we can't prove hacking has occurred, we shouldn't talk about electronic voting. The point is, if hacking HAD occurred, there would be no way to know.

We need a voting system that is transparent. That way we can all see if fraud has been committed or not.

I'm also sad to see you skip the issue of audits. We can at least audit the paper records to see if the counts are accurate. Whenever that's been done in Los Angeles, the machines are shown to be inaccurate, based on the paper count. Until people understand that hand counts are needed to check computer counts, we leave ourselves wide open to fraud, whether we can ever prove it or not.

Btw - I saw a comment of yours on DK re a diarist who made a comment about there being 4.3 million registered voters in Indiana. I decided to look it up. Guess what? There ARE 4.3 million registered voters, per the IN Secretary of State's media kit relating to the upcoming primary.

I agree its important to remain factual at all times.

But the best scientists aren't the ones who limit themselves only to known facts. The best ones are those that draw reasonable inferences between sets of data that make new discoveries possible.

If you posit that because you can't detect fraud, it's a worthless issue to discuss, you abandon a part of the debate we need to make incessantly until we get a system that WOULD show alteration.

Anyway - rant off. ;-D I feel there are a lot of people who succomb to peer pressure not to discuss anything conspiratorial, even when some of those things are the single most important issues we could be discussing.

It's very obvious to me that if the Republicans are willing to go to great lengths to keep people from voting, they won't stop at purging voter rolls.

"If you look for the social economic motive, you will not have to wait for history to tell you what was propaganda and what was truth." - George Seldes

by Real History Lisa (lpeaseRemoveThis@gte.net) on Mon May 5th, 2008 at 10:57:27 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Lisa, we do know that Sarasota County's database network was hacked during early voting in 2006. Not only can we "prove that hacking occurred," it's hardly in question since they wrote up a report on that attack. Sarasota County is where the problems in the contested 13th Congressional district election occurred.

The computer database infrastructure of Sarasota County, Fla., was attacked by a notorious Internet worm on the first day of early voting during the 2006 election, which featured the now-contested U.S. House race between Democrat Christine Jennings and Republican Vern Buchanan in Florida's 13th Congressional district.

In the early afternoon hours on Monday, Oct. 23, 2006, an Internet worm slammed into the county's database system, breaching its firewall and overwriting the system's administrative password. The havoc brought the county's network -- and the electronic voting system which relies on it -- to its knees as Internet access was all but lost at voting locations for two hours that afternoon. Voters in one of the nation's most hotly contested Congressional elections were unable to cast ballots during the outage, since officials were unable to verify registration data.

http://tinyurl.com/yqyrra

Sarasota County officials claim that their election system network was not compromised, but there is reason to doubt them.

Here's what the Department of Homeland Security says about a hack of this type.

Compromise by the worm confirms a system is vulnerable to allowing a remote attacker to execute arbitrary code as the local SYSTEM user. It may be possible for an attacker to subsequently leverage a local privilege escalation exploit in order to gain Administrator access to the victim system.

Whether the hack was related to the latter problems is an open question, but we do know that Sarasota suffered extreme problems that were reported in both the early voting and regular voting period. Also, the paper based voting in the early period had an undervote of ~%2 while the electronic voting had an undervote of nearly %18.

The Sarasota incident report confirms that the attack succeeded in changing the administrator password for the county's database system.

When asked if such a worm sent to the system could be used to mask a more nefarious purpose, such as an attempt to hack into the voting system in some fashion, Logan acknowledge that "it's a possibility."

"That's how hackers would normally work," the security expert explained. "Get access to one machine to test the system to see how the rest of the system works."

But if hacking further into the system or planting a virus elsewhere was the hope, Logan believes that it's unlikely that the attack would have been successful. "Our network doesn't share copper or wire with the Supervisor of Elections' network. That's by design for exactly that reasoning," he told me.

The county official's claim that it's "unlikely" that the attack was successful is hardly reassuring given the massive problems that later developed. Bradblog has a long series on this subject, it begins with the latest post and goes all the way back to 2006.

http://www.bradblog.com/?cat=180

ad bellum purificandum - Kenneth Burke

by colinski on Tue May 6th, 2008 at 03:40:31 AM EST
[ Parent ]
CORRECTION: the undervote was less than 18,000, not 18%, which I believe is somewhere around 13% of the votes cast in the Florida's 13th CD.

ad bellum purificandum - Kenneth Burke
by colinski on Tue May 6th, 2008 at 05:53:20 AM EST
[ Parent ]
O/T got an email that Anne Barth will be on your show today at 4:30 p.m. I think you'll really like her. We do at West Virginia Blue.

Well, Watson, we seem to have fallen upon evil days. Sherlock Holmes
by Carnacki (Carnacki AT hauntedvampire DOT com) on Tue May 6th, 2008 at 08:43:24 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Also info on her opponent, Shelley Moore Capito here.

Well, Watson, we seem to have fallen upon evil days. Sherlock Holmes
by Carnacki (Carnacki AT hauntedvampire DOT com) on Tue May 6th, 2008 at 08:53:04 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Want to get really scared? In an article a while back, the EFF mentioned some research that was done on voting machines:

The punchline is that roughly two thirds of the test subjects didn't notice when our homebrew DRE system was lying on its summary screen. In fact, they gave our machine exceptionally high marks. They loved it.

If you go through and do the math, this, combined with the inherent 2-10% input error in all forms of e-voting machines, means that you can flip 5% of the votes in an election, turning a tie into a 55-45 win, with a very good chance of being invisible to statistical analysis! A 10% margin of victory out of thin air, with no trail!

E-voting is unacceptable. Period!

Kill because somebody was killed. Get killed because he killed. Do you think peace will ever come like that?

by Egarwaen on Mon May 5th, 2008 at 09:25:22 PM EST
honest elections officers won't fix bad machines, or bad laws, but they can make a world of difference.

honest elections officers can make sure that the laws are administered fairly. honest elections officers can notice obvious problems with machines. honest elections officers  can insist on staying until every vote is counted.

the Democratic party does not do nearly enough to recruit  elections officers. Much more effective than elections observers.

by AliceDem on Mon May 5th, 2008 at 10:05:40 PM EST


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