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Jim Hightower
Jim Hightower
15 Feb 2012
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Stop Voter-Suppression Drives

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Vote! Editorialists remind us that it's our privilege and patriotic duty to vote. Candidates of all stripes plead with us to vote. "Vote," declares a billboard campaign sponsored by McDonald's. Even Tiffany & Co. chimes in with a pricey pin that spells out "vote" in diamonds.

But not everyone is in the civic spirit. Rather than urging folks everywhere to join in America's festive democratic exercise, there are ugly and aggressive efforts across the land to harass, intimidate and outright block legitimate voters. Ironically, at a time when massive turn-out-the-vote drives are being mounted, various Republican partisans are pushing some widespread voter-suppression drives.

A tricky one called "vote caging" has appeared in Colorado, Florida, Michigan and Ohio. It involves a letter from the Republican National Committee that's been sent to households of older Democrats. Signed by John McCain, this first-class letter has "Do not forward" printed on the envelope. If recipients are having their mail forwarded to, say, a summer home, the RNC piece never reaches them. Instead, it goes back to the GOP. Here's the game: An undeliverable letter can be used later at a polling place on Election Day to challenge the eligibility of the voter, asserting that said voter does not really live in the precinct.

Another variant of caging deserves an especially hot layer of hell for its practitioners. The Michigan Republican Party has threatened to use foreclosure lists to challenge the eligibility of people who're losing their homes, claiming they don't really live there. Just the threat will keep some of these hard-hit families from even trying to vote, for they'll think to themselves: "You know, I've got enough problems right now without this hassle, so forget it."

Then there are America's wounded veterans in Veterans Affairs hospitals. In a move that leaves me whopper-jawed, George W.'s secretary of Veterans Affairs issued an edict in May banning voter-registration drives inside VA facilities.

For decades, nonpartisan groups routinely have been allowed inside so vets who served our country and suffered physical and mental harm could register. But now the Bushites have slammed democracy's door on them. Under pressure from Congress and veterans groups, the VA officially reversed this inane policy last month, but registration campaigns say they still were being blocked even as registration deadlines passed Oct. 4.

College students are special targets of suppression this year. With predictions that the November election will produce the largest turnout of young people in history, there's been an impressive outburst of creativity by GOP voting officials who want to dilute that turnout. In Colorado Springs, Colo., for example, the county election office, run by Republicans, sent word to out-of-state students at Colorado College that they could not vote at their school precinct if their parents claimed them as dependents for tax purposes. This is, of course, false. Curiously, it was directed at the liberal arts college, but there's no sign that the same message was sent to Republican-minded students at the Air Force Academy, also located in Colorado Springs.

At Virginia Tech, in Blacksburg, a voter registrar warned students that they could lose scholarships if they tried to vote there. At Radford University, also in the battleground state of Virginia, a registrar automatically denied all voting applications that listed dorm addresses. And at Virginia's Old Dominion University, students got intimidating questionnaires from the local election board asking whether their cars were registered out of state.

The Supreme Court, by the way, has ruled that students can vote where they go to school.

These tactics to keep people from the polls are disgraceful insults to our nation's proud democratic ideals. It should be easy to vote, and every vote should be encouraged. Easing the system and halting these nonsensical suppression efforts should be a priority of the next Congress. Let's really mean it when we say, "Vote!"

To find out more about Jim Hightower, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
Sir;...God love your old hide, but there is nothing new here. The republicans do not govern for the whole people, and they have no respect for democracy. The democrats are little better, but without the money to buy public opinion, and keep up the scare they must appeal to more of the people. In fact our whole government is anti democratic, and for that very reason the landowners bore the price of government until the income tax became law. And it was made worse than it was found. The house of representatives limited their number. Once in our history there was one representative for every thirty thousand. Now that number is closer to one representative for every six hundred thousand. Does your government work for you??? Mine does not work for me. The whole thing began with little democracy, and it has only gotten worse. Are the republicans concerned for a handfull of votes??? It is because government has neatly divided us in every possible fashion. It does not matter to me whether the whole government is republican or democrat because as it stands it refuses to hear the voices of the people. Each district should be comprised of thirty thousand and every representative should clearly represent the will of the voters. How is that possible when we are cleaved right down the middle???. To have power our government has robbed us of our power. How can any government represent the whole people when slightly less than fifty percent of voters vote against their representative??? The government is forced to rule because it cannot govern. Niether party has the undivided support of the people and there is much outright enmity. The government has been the winner in this situation. The party structures have been winners...Their power has grown as ours has waned. Look at the immense sums spent to reach an office that pays very little. Why??? For Power??? That is our power they play upon. That is our power they dicker and deal on. The government can only hold that power so long as we are divided. So they diviide us. What if we should need our unity??? What if our very survival as a nation depends upon our unity??? Will we find that in a police state or at the end of a gun??? The government should resolve our differences instead of playing upon them for their power. It is time to seek unity, and not on any terms, but with justice for all. We cannot live without government. We can live without this government...Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Wed Oct 15, 2008 7:56 AM
Third world tactics in a first class country. Where is our shining light, our beacon of hope to stop this assault against our democratic process? Jeb Bush is alive and well and his legacy remains. Whoever becomes President absolutely needs to add "and God bless America".
Comment: #2
Posted by: liz
Wed Oct 15, 2008 9:16 PM
Jim Hightower is really cryin' in his soup. ACORN is active throughout the country tryin' their best to steal this election for that idiot Obama and he has to cry about a few problems that have cropped up from Republicans. Obama has funded some of the ACORN stupidity and has also worked for these jerks, not to mention that he is a lyin' skunk of a human. Conservative Democrats are startin' to come on strong for McCain and will put him over the top as the end draws near. Obama has a problem with his math and that is probably because he isn't really a scholar of any account. There is no way he can pay for his stupid pie-in-the-sky ideas by just taxing the rich. If any dumb liberal Democrat thinks this can be accomplish as stated by Obama, Jim Hightower probably has a ranch for sissies that they can go to and cry their eyes out after it's all over.
Comment: #3
Posted by: John Edwards
Fri Oct 31, 2008 11:59 PM
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